LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Fountainhead, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Individualism
Integrity vs. Conformity
Rationality vs. Emotion
Love and Selfishness
Religion and Morality
Summary
Analysis
When Dominique returns earlier than expected, Keating wants to know whether that means he won’t get Stoneridge. Dominique tells him that he will, and that Wynand will meet him that night and explain everything. Keating snaps at her that she and Wynand are behaving like “truck drivers” with no decency, but that he refuses to be hurt by them. That night, Wynand tells him that he will be marrying Dominique and that she is leaving for Reno that night. He gives Keating the signed papers for Stoneridge and an extra $250,000. Keating accepts all of it, and then goes and gets drunk with some acquaintances.
Keating accuses Dominique and Wynand of behaving badly while conveniently forgetting that he was the one who insisted that Dominique go meet Wynand in order to get Stoneridge for him. When she comes back early, Keating’s only thought is about the project. However, after he gets the project and some extra money from Wynand, Keating seems to be ashamed and disgusted with himself.
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Themes
Dominique goes to see Steven Mallory, who tells her Roark is in Clayton, Ohio, working on a department store. Mallory also tells Dominique that Wynand bought many of his sculptures and that Mallory has enough money now. The next morning, Dominique leaves for Reno.
Roark has become so unpopular in New York that no one is giving him work there—he seems to be following projects into small towns. Also, it seems like Wynand, like Roark, recognizes talent when he sees it and appreciates Mallory’s work.
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The next day, Keating feels he has to go meet Toohey and heads to his apartment “like the survivor of a shipwreck swimming to a distant light.” Toohey is busy working and makes him wait until he finishes. Then, he makes a phone call to Gus Webb. When Toohey finally turns to Keating, he gives him the check Wynand had given him and tells him to use the money for a good cause. Keating then tells Toohey he is the only friend he has, and that he’d “sold Dominique,” who has gone to Reno. Toohey is immediately furious, saying Keating shouldn’t have allowed it.
Keating seems to be increasingly dependent on Toohey but seems to have fallen from Toohey’s favor—he keeps Keating waiting rather than greeting him with his usual geniality. When Toohey hears the news about Dominique and Wynand, he is angry because he had wanted them both destroyed by their relationship, and they instead seem to share a connection and to genuinely want to marry.
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Later, Toohey tells Alvah Scarret that they both wouldn’t want “that particular influence [to] enter the life of [their] boss.” He suggests that they stick together, and Scarret agrees. Scarret sees Wynand, who declares that there will be no pictures of Dominique or their wedding in the Banner.
Toohey is afraid Dominique will warn Wynand against Toohey’s growing influence at the Banner, and as a pre-emptive strike, he warns Scarret against Dominique’s influence on Wynand. Wynand clearly cares about Dominique deeply, and therefore wants her kept out of the Banner. Thus far, only his prized art collection was kept out of the Banner.
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On her way to Reno, Dominique stops at Clayton, Ohio, to see Roark. She walks from the train station to the building site and feels faint when she finds him. She tells him that he is taking on such small projects that it feels like the quarry again. He says she could think of it that way, though it isn’t really. She says it is a fall after the important buildings he’d done, and he says he loves doing it, that “Every building is like a person. Single and unrepeatable.”
Dominique is hurt to see Roark wasting his greatness by working on a small building in a small town, but Roark is happy to be building something—he doesn’t care about the prestige attached to big New York projects and so doesn’t perceive his current situation as a fall.
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Dominique tells Roark that she is marrying Gail Wynand. Roark looks shocked, saying that’s even worse than Keating. Dominique agrees. One of the workers calls Roark to consult with him, and Dominique watches them discussing work. When he comes back, she tells him that they can stay in this town forever, if only he promises to give up architecture. She says she can’t bear to see his passion for his work because it will end in some “terrible kind of disaster” and that he should therefore give it up. Roark says that, if he were a cruel person, he’d accept her offer “just to see how soon [she’d] beg [him] to go back to building.” He says she needs to “stop hating [the world], learn not to notice it.” He then walks her to the station and she boards a train for Reno.
Like Dominique, Roark, too, has a low opinion of Wynand, having never met him and knowing him only as the owner of the Banner. This alone makes him sure that Wynand is worse than even Keating. Again, Roark tells Dominique she has to learn not to notice the world—by hating it so much, she is giving the world too much power and influence over her.