Atlas Shrugged


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atlas-shrugged

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to invent the lights, the steel, the furnaces, the motors—they were the world, they, not the men who
crouched in dark corners, half-begging, half-threatening, boastfully displaying their open sores as their
only claim on life and virtue—so long as he knew that there existed one man with the bright courage of a
new thought, could he give up the world to those others?—so long as he could find a single sight to give
him a life-restoring shot of admiration, could he believe that the world belonged to the sores, the moans
and the guns?—the men who invented motors did exist, he would never doubt their reality, it was his
vision of them that had made the contrast-unbearable, so that even the loathing was the tribute of his
loyalty to them and to that world which was theirs and his.
"Darling . . ." he said, "darling . . ." like a man awakening suddenly, when he noticed that she had
stopped speaking.
"What's the matter, Hank?" she asked softly.
"Nothing . . . Except that you shouldn't have called Stadler." His face was bright with confidence, his
voice sounded amused, protective and gentle; she could discover nothing else, he looked as he had
always looked, it was only the note of gentleness that seemed strange and new.
"I kept feeling that I shouldn't have," she said, "but I didn't know why."
"I'll tell you why." He leaned forward. "What he wanted from you was a recognition that he was still the
Dr, Robert Stadler he should have been, but wasn't and knew he wasn't. He wanted you to grant him
your respect, in spite of and in contradiction to his actions. He wanted you to juggle reality for him, so
that his greatness would remain, but the State Science Institute would be wiped out, as if it had never
existed—and you're the only one who could do it for him."
"Why I?"
"Because you're the victim."
She looked at him, startled. He spoke intently; he felt a sudden, violent clarity of perception, as if a surge
of energy were rushing into the activity of sight, fusing the half-seen and haft-grasped into a single shape
and direction.
"Dagny, they're doing something that we've never understood. They know something which we don't,
but should discover. I can't see it fully yet, but I'm beginning to see parts of it. That looter from the State
Science Institute was scared when I refused to help him pretend that he was just an honest buyer of my
Metal. He was scared way deep. Of what? I don't know—public opinion was just his name for it, but it's
not the full name. Why should he have been scared? He has the guns, the jails, the laws—he could have
seized the whole of my mills, if he wished, and nobody would have risen to defend me, and he knew
it—so why should he have cared what I thought? But he did.
It was I who had to tell him that he wasn't a looter, but my customer and friend. That's what he needed
from me. And that's what Dr. Stadler needed from you—it was you who had to act as if he were a great
man who had never tried to destroy your rail and my Metal. I don't know what it is that they think they
accomplish—but they want us to pretend that we sec the world as they pretend they see it. They need
some sort of sanction from us. I don't know the nature of that sanction—but. Dagny, I know that if we
value our lives, we must not give it to them. If they put you on a torture rack, don't give it to them. Let
them destroy your railroad and my mills, but don't give it to them. Because I know this much: I know that
that's our only chance."

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