| The
Fountainhead Essay Contest |
| for
students of high schools and junior colleges in
India |
| 2000
First Prize Winner: Sakshi Gupta |
|
|
|
Sakshi Gupta,
La Martiniere Girls' College, Lucknow
Topic:
Identify the theme of The Fountainhead. Explain why
some people think it is important to destroy a person like
Howard Roark. Is it possible to bring such a person down in
the real world?
The
Fountainhead is a novel of gigantic proportions.
It deals with great talent and great mediocrity, with great
love and great hatred, with great ambition and equally great
complacence. It unpretentiously chooses to steer clear
of the much hyped common man, with his commonplace dreams
and aspirations.
The
theme of The Fountainhead can be summarized in the
famous line by the author-"man's ego is the fountainhead
of human progress". The novel exalts egotism, which
is generally looked upon in our world with great dislike.
The protagonist, Howard Roark, is a man used by the author
to exemplify this philosophy. He is a man of outstanding
genius whose only fault seems to be that the world is not
ready for him. This man's genius remains unrecognized
by the society, he is shunned and ridiculed, but no number
of attempts to break him, to force him to confine his work
within the parameters laid by the society succeed.
The inborn talent in this man and the fountainhead of inspiration
in his soul cannot be restrained by any force on earth.
Individualism
is the doctrine on which the novel is based." No man can
live for another". If a man has talent, and recognises
the potential within him, he has the right to be an egotist.
Egotism must not be equated with false pride. A man
who believes in himself acquires the strength to combat
the whole world. Such is the case of Howard Roark.
What puts him on a plane much higher than every other character
in this novel is the sheer power and self conviction he
exudes in the face of the gravest adversity. Howard
Roark is as powerful as he is not because he has any control
over the society or the minds of others, but because he
is the complete master of his own mind. He does not
seek anybody's approval. The book completely disregards
conventional virtues like charity and altruism as fronts
that an insufficient man uses to hide his ineptness.
Roark
is a man who lives up to the word "man". He believes
that man alone has power over himself He does not believe
in God or in destiny, simple because he doesn't need to.
In order to be truly great a man must be physically, mentally
and spiritually be involved in his work, the way Roark was.
Roark treats his work with the respect and reverence that
other men lavish over God. To him, insincerity towards
one's work is the worst blasphemy possible. This is
the line of thought that runs throughout the novel.
The
hallmark of Roark is work is his complete irreverence for
all precedents, traditions and conventions. His ideas
are too revolutionary to be accepted, but he refuses, at
any point of time to compromise with his ideals, no matter
what his compulsions may be. He is a man of such immense
integrity, that he would rather break stones in a quarry
than make a substandard building. which is what the world
demands of him.
The
reason why some people seek to destroy Howard Roark is that
his very presence evokes an unreasonable fear in their hearts.
This quest to destroy the genius within him started from
the very beginning of his career when he was expelled from
The Stanton institute of Technology, where he had been studying
architecture. All his teachers except his mathematics
professor were against him
His
boundless brilliance threatened to expose their ignorance.
However talent cannot restrict itself within rigid boundaries,
so Roark refused the chance of coming back to the college
after an year which was offered to him-he knew that they
had nothing to teach him.
Such
was the brilliance of Howard Roark that the pillars of the
science of architecture, the keepers of the art felt shaken.
This was the first time they had encountered a man who would
not allow anyone to make him, hence they could not break
him either. One such man is Ellsworth Toohey.
He is a man who is addicted to power, he wants to rule the
world. However, his thirst for power can never be
quenched for as long as men like Howard Roark exist on the
earth. He wishes to establish control over the human
mind,, but Howard's unbridled brilliance cannot be subjugated.
As he has no sway over the man, the only course open to
him is to destroy Roark completely, which he tries to do
through negative propaganda, ridicule and often complete
ignorance of his buildings. He wishes to "enshrine
mediocrity".
It is
interesting to note that the only people who dared to support
Roark were self made people, people for whom practical worth
held - more importance than public approval, be it Austen
Heller, Steven Mallory or Gail Waynand. No one else
dared to form an opinion of their own. The fact that
Ellsworth Toohey said that Roark's work was ridiculous was
sufficient reason for men like Hopton Stoddard to mock at
it as well.
They
chose to promote mediocrity over genius because the mediocre
man was convenient for them. A mediocre man would
work within parameters set by them, but genius could never
be subordinated." In Toohey9s own words-"laugh at Roark
and hold Peter Keating as a great architect. You've
destroyed architecture." The vested interests of some men
were the reason why an untalented man like Peter Keating
was allowed to rise.
Dominique
Francon had a completely different reason to wish to destroy
him. She loved him with inconceivable passion, appreciated
his work, but still tried all she could do to destroy his
career. This was because she could not bear the fact
that the world dared to be irreverent towards his creation.
She intentionally snatched away all assignments from him
because she felt that the world did not deserve such talent.
However,
in reality, a man like Howard Roark can never be brought
down. Roark cannot be destroyed by society because
he does not allow other men any hold over him. He
is a man whose soul remains untouched by external influence.
He does not need any outside approval to prove his own merit
to himself Howard Roark believes that "man's first duty
is to himself" and his only moral obligation is' towards
his work.
Howard
Roark is unaffected by criticism, which is the tool his
adversaries use to destroy them. He is not vulnerable
to pain either-'lit only goes down to a certain point".
There is just no way in which his enemies can inflict any
pain on him, he can, by no means be destroyed. He
can only be broken the day he feels he has not done justice
to his work, and for as long as he lives he will never allow
that day to come.
Howard
Roark never tries to look for an easy way out of anything.
That to him would be a compromise, a thing worse than death
for him. He engages no lawyer at the Stoddard temple-trial
and chooses the harshest jurymen at the Corlandt Building
trial, which only goes to prove that this man is completely
innocent of fear. He chooses to blow up a building he has
planned and face the prospect of going to jail rather than
to see it tampered with by his contemporaries.
Roark
is a man who is not content merely existing, he lives life
to the fullest A man of such incredible strength can never
be destroyed .he may physically be open to destruction,
but the fountainhead -of inspiration within him and his
amazing selfconviction can never be shattered.
Copyright
2000. Liberty Institute, New Delhi
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