"Rand, Ayn - Fountainhead" - читать интересную книгу автора (Rand Ayn)"I won't be back. I have nothing further to learn here." "I don't understand you," said the Dean stiffly. "Is there any point in explaining? It's of no interest to you any longer." "You will kindly explain yourself." "If you wish. I want to be an architect, not an archeologist. I see no purpose in doing Renaissance villas. Why learn to design them, when I'll never build them?" "My dear boy, the great style of the Renaissance is far from dead. Houses of that style are being erected every day." "They are. And they will be. But not by me." "Come, come, now, this is childish." "I came here to learn about building. When I was given a project, its only value to me was to learn to solve it as I would solve I a real one in the future. I did them the way I'll build them. I've | learned all I could learn here--in the structural sciences of which you don't approve. One more year of drawing Italian post cards would give me nothing." ' An hour ago the Dean had wished that this interview would proceed as calmly as possible. Now he wished that Roark would display some emotion; it seemed unnatural for him to be so quietly natural in the circumstances. "Do you mean to tell me that you're thinking seriously of building that way, when and if you are an architect?" "Yes." "That's not the point. The point is, who will stop me?" "Look here, this is serious. I am sorry that I haven't had a long, earnest talk with you much earlier...I know, I know, I know, don't interrupt me, you've seen a modernistic building or two, and it gave you ideas. But do you realize what a passing fancy that whole so-called modern movement is? You must learn to understand--and it has been proved by all authorities--that everything beautiful in architecture has been done already. There is a treasure mine in every style of the past. We can only choose from the great masters. Who are we to improve upon them? We can only attempt, respectfully, to repeat." "Why?" asked Howard Roark. No, thought the Dean, no, he hasn't said anything else; it's a perfectly innocent word; he's not threatening me. "But it's self-evident!" said the Dean. "Look," said Roark evenly, and pointed at the window. "Can you see the campus and the town? Do you see how many men are walking and living down there? Well, I don't give a damn what any or all of them think about architecture--or about anything else, for that matter. Why should I consider what their grandfathers thought of it?" "That is our sacred tradition." "Why?" "For heaven's sake, can't you stop being so naive about it?" "But I don't understand. Why do you want me to think that this is great architecture?" He pointed to the picture of the Parthenon. "That," said the Dean, "is the Parthenon." "So it is." |
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