26 Quotes About Dagny Taggart

Dagny Taggart is a fictional character in a series of novels by Ayn Rand. Dagny is the only female member of the board of directors at the fictional railroad company, Taggart Transcontinental or Taggart Transcontinental Railroad. Dagny has been described as a strong, intelligent, and fearless woman who refuses to compromise her integrity and moral code for anything. Although she does not possess any supernatural abilities like other characters in the series, she is considered to be very brave and courageous.

1
She survived it. She was able to survive it, because she did not believe in suffering. She faced with astonished indignation the ugly fact of feeling pain, and refused to let it matter. Suffering was a senseless accident, it was not part of life as she saw it. Ayn Rand
2
If that’s the price of getting together, then I’ll be damned if I want to live on the same earth with any human beings! If the rest of them can survive only by destroying us, then why should we wish them to survive? Nothing can make self-immolation proper. Nothing can give them the right to turn men into sacrificial animals. Nothing can make it moral to destroy the best. One can’t be punished for being good. One can’t be penalized for ability. If that is right, then we’d better start slaughtering one another, because there isn’t any right at all in the world! . Ayn Rand
3
It seemed natural; natural to the moment’s peculiar reality that was sharply clear, but cut off from everything, immediate, but disconnected, like a bright island in a wall of fog, the heightened, unquestioning reality one feels when one is drunk. Ayn Rand
4
We are those who do not disconnect the values of their minds from the actions of their bodies, those who do not leave their values to empty dreams, but bring them into existence, those who give material form to thoughts, and reality to values. Ayn Rand
5
She knew the general doctrine on sex, held by people in one form or another, the doctrine that sex was an ugly weakness of man’s lower nature, to be condoned regretfully. She experienced an emotion of chastity that made her shrink, not from the desires of her body, but from any contact with the minds who held this doctrine. Ayn Rand
6
Isn’t it wonderful that our bodies can give us so much pleasure?” he said to her once, quite simply. They were happy and radiantly innocent. They were both incapable of the conception that joy is sin. Ayn Rand
7
Dagny leaned back in her chair. The short sentence was a shock. It was not merely relief: it was the sudden realization that nothing else was necessary to guarantee that it would be done; she needed no proofs, no questions, no explanations; a complex problem could rest safely on three syllables pronounced by a man who knew what he was saying. Ayn Rand
8
When the train stopped, when she got off and heard the concrete of the platform under her heels, she felt light, lifted, impelled to action. She started off, walking fast, as if the speed of her steps could give form to the things she felt. Ayn Rand
9
...were she lying crushed under the ruins of a building, were she torn by the bomb of an air raid, so long as she was still in existence she would know that action is man’s foremost obligation, regardless of anything he feels... Ayn Rand
10
Incredulity and indifference were her only reaction: incredulity, because she could not conceive of what would bring human beings to such a state –indifference, because she could not regard those who reached it, as human any longer. Ayn Rand
11
They said you were hard and cold and unfeeling.”“ But it’s true.. I am, in the sense they mean–only have they ever told you in just what sense they mean it?"" What did they mean about you?”“ Whenever anyone accuses some person of being ‘unfeeling, ’ he means that that person is just. He means that that person has no causeless emotions and will not grant him a feeling which he does not deserve. He means that .‘to feel’ is to go against reason, against moral values, against reality. . Ayn Rand
12
Whenever anyone accuses some person of being ‘unfeeling, ’ he means that that person is just. He means that that person has no causeless emotions and will not grant him a feeling which he does not deserve. He means that .‘to feel’ is to go against reason, against moral values, against reality. Ayn Rand
13
No action could be lower or more futile than for one person to throw upon another the burden of his abdication of choice. Ayn Rand
14
The things you were talking about. The lights and the flowers. Do they expect those things to make them romantic, not the other way around?”“ Darling, what do you mean?”“ There wasn’t a person there who enjoyed it, ” she said, her voice lifeless, “or who thought or felt anything at all. They moved about, and they said the same dull things they say anywhere. I suppose they thought the lights would make it brilliant.”“ Darling, you take everything too seriously. One is not supposed to be intellectual at a ball. One is simply supposed to be gay.”“ How? By being stupid?. Ayn Rand
15
You will follow me, if we are what we are, you and I, if we live, if the world exists, if you know the meaning of this moment and can't let it slip by, as others let it slip, into the senselessness of the unwilled and unreached. Ayn Rand
16
As she looked at him, her dark gray eyes went slowly from astonishment to stillness, then to a strange expression that resembled a look of weariness, except that it seemed to reflect much more than the endurance of this one moment. Ayn Rand
17
...she stood beside him, sagging in his arms, abandoning herself to anything he wished, in open acknowledgment of his power to reduce her to helplessness by the pleasure he had the power to give her. Ayn Rand
18
She had been proved right so eloquently, she had thought, that comments were unnecessary. Ayn Rand
19
Are you saying, ” he asked slowly, “that I rose in your estimation when you found that I wanted you?”“ Of course.”“ That’s not the reaction of most people to being wanted.”“ It isn’t.”“ Most people feel that they rise in their own eyes, if others want them.”“ I feel that others live up to me, if they want me.... Ayn Rand
20
She lay on her back, looking up at the sky, feeling no desire to move or think or know that there was any time beyond this moment. Ayn Rand
21
It was the only lie she ever told. She did not do it to protect Francisco; she did it because she felt, for some reason which she could not define, that the incident was a secret too precious to share. Ayn Rand
22
She wanted to tell him of the years she had spent looking for men such as he to work with; she wanted to tell him that his enemies were hers, that she was fighting the same battle... Ayn Rand
23
Well, whose opinion did you take?”“ I don’t ask for opinions.”“ What do you go by?”“ Judgment.”“ Well, whose judgment did you take?”“ Mine.”“ But whom did you consult about it?”“ Nobody. Ayn Rand
24
The capacity for unclouded enjoyment, she thought, does not belong to irresponsible fools; an inviolate peace of spirit is not the achievement of a drifter; to be able to laugh like that is the end result of the most profound, most solemn thinking. Ayn Rand
25
You always play it open, don’t you?” he asked.“ I’ve never noticed you doing otherwise.”“ I thought I was the only one who could afford to. Ayn Rand