Animal Farm book report

BOOK PROJECT ANIMAL FARM.      Directions for completing:

Save Time On Research and Writing
Hire a Pro to Write You a 100% Plagiarism-Free Paper.
Get My Paper

Step 1:   MUST complete the book reading. 

There is 1 weeks until the project is due.  There are 10 chapters, you should  write a summary of each chapter in a paragraph (5 sentences minimum). Then, summarize your reading in a full, well written, ORIGINALLY AUTHORED (by you) essay.  

Step 2:  Choose THREE Literary Devices. (example: Alliteration; Personification;Simile, Foreshadowing,…)   and write a paragraph [for each of the three]  citing and showing a copy of the sentence or paragraph in the book where you derived the example.  Describe how the example you chose illustrates the particular device.

Step 3:    Write ONE paragraph about the author.  This must be ORIGINALLY AUTHORED [by YOU].  

Save Time On Research and Writing
Hire a Pro to Write You a 100% Plagiarism-Free Paper.
Get My Paper

Step 4: Write a minimum of three paragraphs that describe how this story made you think.  Discuss your

personal reflection on the story, the setting, the characters, or the author’s chosen topic.  

Alliteration. This is one of the easiest go-to devices to use. Alliteration involves the quick repetition of the first letters, and therefore the first sounds, of words.

The white witch wanted to write a new spell.

New aunt Anita aimed to avoid annoying her tired sister.

Personification. Giving inanimate objects and other phenomena human traits.

The leaves danced in the wind, twirling round and round before bowing out and resting on the cold ground.

etition of the first letters, and therefore the first sounds, of words.

The white witch wanted to write a new spell.
New aunt Anita aimed to avoid annoying her tired sister.
Personification. Giving inanimate objects and other phenomena human traits.

The leaves danced in the wind, twirling round and round before bowing out and resting on the cold ground.

Simile. Comparing two unrelated things to creating new understanding and meaning. They are marked by the use of “like,” “as,”or “such as.”

She ran like the wind.

His eyes were as blue as the sky.

Foreshadowing. Words, phrases, or events that hint or suggest to the reader what’s going to happen in the story.

In To Kill a Mockingbird, finding the presents in the oak tree foreshadows the truth about Boo Radley.

Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart” foreshadows the narrator’s actions from the start of the story: I can’t say how the idea first entered my brain, but once it was there, it haunted me day and night. There wasn’t any reason for it. I liked the old man.

Satire. Using humor, wit, or sarcasm to expose human vice or folly.

In television, the creators of South Park have built their success on satire.

My favorite example is Jonathan Swift’s “A Modest Proposal.”

Symbolism. Using objects or action to mean something more than what appears on the surface.

The dawn of a new day often is used to symbolize a new beginning.

The albatross in in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” symbolizes a burden: Ah ! well a-day ! what evil looks / Had I from old and young ! / Instead of the cross, the Albatross / About my neck was hung

In daily life, people often associate colors with ideas. Black with death. Red with love. White with purity or peace.

Onomatopoeia. Words whose sound mimics natural sounds or sounds of an object. These words help bring the reader into the scene by working on the senses.

Bang! Flutter. Buzzzzz! Hum.

The birds tweet in chipper chatter outside the window.

A loud bang jarred me from sleep.

Metaphor. A device that asserts that one object is another, bringing new meaning to the original subject for a fresh understanding.

A common metaphor: it’s raining cats and dogs.

From Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet”: But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks? / It is the east, and Juliet is the sun.

Advertising is the rattling of a stick inside a swill bucket. – George Orwell

Hyperbole. Exaggerating a statement or idea to emphasize a point or emotion.

If I take another step, my feet will fall off.

She’s so thin she could thread a needle.

If his teeth were any whiter, I’d be blind.

Oxymoron. A device that puts two contradictory ideas together to create complex meaning.

Their relationship was an open secret.

The sight of the living dead shuffling below sent a blazing chill down her spine.

It’s hard to explain that comforting pain to those who don’t understand.

ANIMAL
FARM

George Orwell

First published in 1

9

4

4.

This web edition published by eBooks@Adelaide.

Last updated Wednesday, December 1

7

,

20

14

at 14:20.

To the best of our knowledge, the text of this

work is in the “Public Domain” in Australia.

HOWEVER, copyright law varies in other countries, and the work

may still be under copyright in the country from which you are

accessing this website. It is your responsibility to check the

applicable copyright laws in your country before downloading this

work.

eBooks@Adelaide

The University of Adelaide Library

University of Adelaide

South Australia

5

005

Pdf created by OpenRightsLibrary.com

http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/

http://www.openrightslibrary.com/

Animal Farm, by George Orwell

  • Chapter 1
  • Chapter 2
  • Chapter

    3

  • Chapter 4
  • Chapter 5
  • Chapter

    6

  • Chapter 7
  • Chapter

    8

  • Chapter 9
  • Chapter

    10

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    3

    Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    M
    r. Jones, of the Manor Farm, had locked the hen-houses
    for the night, but was too drunk to remember to shut the
    pop-holes. With the ring of light from his lantern

    dancing from side to side, he lurched across the yard, kicked off his
    boots at the back door, drew himself a last glass of beer from the
    barrel in the scullery, and made his way up to bed, where Mrs.
    Jones was already snoring.

    As soon as the light in the bedroom went out there was a
    stirring and a fluttering all through the farm buildings. Word had
    gone round during the day that old Major, the prize Middle White
    boar, had had a strange dream on the previous night and wished to
    communicate it to the other animals. It had been agreed that they
    should all meet in the big barn as soon as Mr. Jones was safely out
    of the way. Old Major (so he was always called, though the name
    under which he had been exhibited was Willingdon Beauty) was so
    highly regarded on the farm that everyone was quite ready to lose
    an hour’s sleep in order to hear what he had to say.

    At one end of the big barn, on a sort of raised platform, Major
    was already ensconced on his bed of straw, under a lantern which
    hung from a beam. He was twelve years old and had lately grown
    rather stout, but he was still a majestic-looking pig, with a wise and
    benevolent appearance in spite of the fact that his tushes had never
    been cut. Before long the other animals began to arrive and make
    themselves comfortable after their different fashions. First came
    the three dogs, Bluebell, Jessie, and Pincher, and then the pigs,

    CHAPTER 1

    4

    who settled down in the straw immediately in front of the
    platform. The hens perched themselves on the window-sills, the
    pigeons fluttered up to the rafters, the sheep and cows lay down
    behind the pigs and began to chew the cud. The two cart-horses,
    Boxer and Clover, came in together, walking very slowly and setting
    down their vast hairy hoofs with great care lest there should be
    some small animal concealed in the straw. Clover was a stout
    motherly mare approaching middle life, who had never quite got
    her figure back after her fourth foal. Boxer was an enormous beast,
    nearly eighteen hands high, and as strong as any two ordinary
    horses put together. A white stripe down his nose gave him a
    somewhat stupid appearance, and in fact he was not of first-rate
    intelligence, but he was universally respected for his steadiness of
    character and tremendous powers of work. After the horses came
    Muriel, the white goat, and Benjamin, the donkey. Benjamin was
    the oldest animal on the farm, and the worst tempered. He seldom
    talked, and when he did, it was usually to make some cynical
    remark — for instance, he would say that God had given him a tail
    to keep the flies off, but that he would sooner have had no tail and
    no flies. Alone among the animals on the farm he never laughed. If
    asked why, he would say that he saw nothing to laugh at.
    Nevertheless, without openly admitting it, he was devoted to
    Boxer; the two of them usually spent their Sundays together in the
    small paddock beyond the orchard, grazing side by side and never
    speaking.

    The two horses had just lain down when a brood of ducklings,
    which had lost their mother, filed into the barn, cheeping feebly
    and wandering from side to side to find some place where they
    would not be trodden on. Clover made a sort of wall round them
    with her great foreleg, and the ducklings nestled down inside it and

    5

    promptly fell asleep. At the last moment Mollie, the foolish, pretty
    white mare who drew Mr. Jones’s trap, came mincing daintily in,
    chewing at a lump of sugar. She took a place near the front and
    began flirting her white mane, hoping to draw attention to the red
    ribbons it was plaited with. Last of all came the cat, who looked
    round, as usual, for the warmest place, and finally squeezed herself
    in between Boxer and Clover; there she purred contentedly
    throughout Major’s speech without listening to a word of what he
    was saying.

    All the animals were now present except Moses, the tame
    raven, who slept on a perch behind the back door. When Major saw
    that they had all made themselves comfortable and were waiting
    attentively, he cleared his throat and began:

    “Comrades, you have heard already about the strange dream
    that I had last night. But I will come to the dream later. I have
    something else to say first. I do not think, comrades, that I shall be
    with you for many months longer, and before I die, I feel it my duty
    to pass on to you such wisdom as I have acquired. I have had a long
    life, I have had much time for thought as I lay alone in my stall,
    and I think I may say that I understand the nature of life on this
    earth as well as any animal now living. It is about this that I wish
    to speak to you.

    “Now, comrades, what is the nature of this life of ours? Let us
    face it: our lives are miserable, laborious, and short. We are born,
    we are given just so much food as will keep the breath in our
    bodies, and those of us who are capable of it are forced to work to
    the last atom of our strength; and the very instant that our
    usefulness has come to an end we are slaughtered with hideous
    cruelty. No animal in England knows the meaning of happiness or
    leisure after he is a year old. No animal in England is free. The life

    6

    of an animal is misery and slavery: that is the plain truth.

    “But is this simply part of the order of nature? Is it because
    this land of ours is so poor that it cannot afford a decent life to
    those who dwell upon it? No, comrades, a thousand times no! The
    soil of England is fertile, its climate is good, it is capable of
    affording food in abundance to an enormously greater number of
    animals than now inhabit it. This single farm of ours would
    support a dozen horses, twenty cows, hundreds of sheep — and all
    of them living in a comfort and a dignity that are now almost
    beyond our imagining. Why then do we continue in this miserable
    condition? Because nearly the whole of the produce of our labour
    is stolen from us by human beings. There, comrades, is the answer
    to all our problems. It is summed up in a single word — Man. Man
    is the only real enemy we have. Remove Man from the scene, and
    the root cause of hunger and overwork is abolished for ever.

    “Man is the only creature that consumes without producing.
    He does not give milk, he does not lay eggs, he is too weak to pull
    the plough, he cannot run fast enough to catch rabbits. Yet he is
    lord of all the animals. He sets them to work, he gives back to them
    the bare minimum that will prevent them from starving, and the
    rest he keeps for himself. Our labour tills the soil, our dung
    fertilises it, and yet there is not one of us that owns more than his
    bare skin. You cows that I see before me, how many thousands of
    gallons of milk have you given during this last year? And what has
    happened to that milk which should have been breeding up sturdy
    calves? Every drop of it has gone down the throats of our enemies.
    And you hens, how many eggs have you laid in this last year, and
    how many of those eggs ever hatched into chickens? The rest have
    all gone to market to bring in money for Jones and his men. And
    you, Clover, where are those four foals you bore, who should have

    7

    been the support and pleasure of your old age? Each was sold at a
    year old — you will never see one of them again. In return for your
    four confinements and all your labour in the fields, what have you
    ever had except your bare rations and a stall?

    “And even the miserable lives we lead are not allowed to reach
    their natural span. For myself I do not grumble, for I am one of the
    lucky ones. I am twelve years old and have had over four hundred
    children. Such is the natural life of a pig. But no animal escapes the
    cruel knife in the end. You young porkers who are sitting in front
    of me, every one of you will scream your lives out at the block
    within a year. To that horror we all must come — cows, pigs, hens,
    sheep, everyone. Even the horses and the dogs have no better fate.
    You, Boxer, the very day that those great muscles of yours lose
    their power, Jones will sell you to the knacker, who will cut your
    throat and boil you down for the foxhounds. As for the dogs, when
    they grow old and toothless, Jones ties a brick round their necks
    and drowns them in the nearest pond.

    “Is it not crystal clear, then, comrades, that all the evils of this
    life of ours spring from the tyranny of human beings? Only get rid
    of Man, and the produce of our labour would be our own. Almost
    overnight we could become rich and free. What then must we do?
    Why, work night and day, body and soul, for the overthrow of the
    human race! That is my message to you, comrades: Rebellion! I do
    not know when that Rebellion will come, it might be in a week or
    in a hundred years, but I know, as surely as I see this straw
    beneath my feet, that sooner or later justice will be done. Fix your
    eyes on that, comrades, throughout the short remainder of your
    lives! And above all, pass on this message of mine to those who
    come after you, so that future generations shall carry on the
    struggle until it is victorious.

    8

    “And remember, comrades, your resolution must never falter.
    No argument must lead you astray. Never listen when they tell you
    that Man and the animals have a common interest, that the
    prosperity of the one is the prosperity of the others. It is all lies.
    Man serves the interests of no creature except himself. And among
    us animals let there be perfect unity, perfect comradeship in the
    struggle. All men are enemies. All animals are comrades.”

    At this moment there was a tremendous uproar. While Major
    was speaking four large rats had crept out of their holes and were
    sitting on their hindquarters, listening to him. The dogs had
    suddenly caught sight of them, and it was only by a swift dash for
    their holes that the rats saved their lives. Major raised his trotter
    for silence.

    “Comrades,” he said, “here is a point that must be settled. The
    wild creatures, such as rats and rabbits — are they our friends or
    our enemies? Let us put it to the vote. I propose this question to
    the meeting: Are rats comrades?”

    The vote was taken at once, and it was agreed by an
    overwhelming majority that rats were comrades. There were only
    four dissentients, the three dogs and the cat, who was afterwards
    discovered to have voted on both sides. Major continued:

    “I have little more to say. I merely repeat, remember always
    your duty of enmity towards Man and all his ways. Whatever goes
    upon two legs is an enemy. Whatever goes upon four legs, or has
    wings, is a friend. And remember also that in fighting against Man,
    we must not come to resemble him. Even when you have
    conquered him, do not adopt his vices. No animal must ever live in
    a house, or sleep in a bed, or wear clothes, or drink alcohol, or
    smoke tobacco, or touch money, or engage in trade. All the habits
    of Man are evil. And, above all, no animal must ever tyrannise over

    9

    his own kind. Weak or strong, clever or simple, we are all brothers.
    No animal must ever kill any other animal. All animals are equal.

    “And now, comrades, I will tell you about my dream of last
    night. I cannot describe that dream to you. It was a dream of the
    earth as it will be when Man has vanished. But it reminded me of
    something that I had long forgotten. Many years ago, when I was a
    little pig, my mother and the other sows used to sing an old song of
    which they knew only the tune and the first three words. I had
    known that tune in my infancy, but it had long since passed out of
    my mind. Last night, however, it came back to me in my dream.
    And what is more, the words of the song also came back-words, I
    am certain, which were sung by the animals of long ago and have
    been lost to memory for generations. I will sing you that song now,
    comrades. I am old and my voice is hoarse, but when I have taught
    you the tune, you can sing it better for yourselves. It is called
    ‘Beasts of England’.”

    Old Major cleared his throat and began to sing. As he had said,
    his voice was hoarse, but he sang well enough, and it was a stirring
    tune, something between ‘Clementine’ and ‘La Cucaracha’. The
    words ran:

    Beasts of England, beasts of Ireland,
    Beasts of every land and clime,
    Hearken to my joyful tidings
    Of the golden future time.

    Soon or late the day is coming,
    Tyrant Man shall be o’erthrown,
    And the fruitful fields of England
    Shall be trod by beasts alone.

    10

    The singing of this song threw the animals into the wildest
    excitement. Almost before Major had reached the end, they had
    begun singing it for themselves. Even the stupidest of them had
    already picked up the tune and a few of the words, and as for the
    clever ones, such as the pigs and dogs, they had the entire song by
    heart within a few minutes. And then, after a few preliminary tries,
    the whole farm burst out into ‘Beasts of England’ in tremendous

    Rings shall vanish from our noses,
    And the harness from our back,
    Bit and spur shall rust forever,
    Cruel whips no more shall crack.

    Riches more than mind can picture,
    Wheat and barley, oats and hay,
    Clover, beans, and mangel-wurzels
    Shall be ours upon that day.

    Bright will shine the fields of England,
    Purer shall its waters be,
    Sweeter yet shall blow its breezes
    On the day that sets us free.

    For that day we all must labour,
    Though we die before it break;
    Cows and horses, geese and turkeys,
    All must toil for freedom’s sake.

    Beasts of England, beasts of Ireland,
    Beasts of every land and clime,
    Hearken well and spread my tidings
    Of the golden future time.

    11

    unison. The cows lowed it, the dogs whined it, the sheep bleated it,
    the horses whinnied it, the ducks quacked it. They were so
    delighted with the song that they sang it right through five times in
    succession, and might have continued singing it all night if they
    had not been interrupted.

    Unfortunately, the uproar awoke Mr. Jones, who sprang out of
    bed, making sure that there was a fox in the yard. He seized the
    gun which always stood in a corner of his bedroom, and let fly a
    charge of number 6 shot into the darkness. The pellets buried
    themselves in the wall of the barn and the meeting broke up
    hurriedly. Everyone fled to his own sleeping-place. The birds
    jumped on to their perches, the animals settled down in the straw,
    and the whole farm was asleep in a moment.

    12

    Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    T
    hree nights later old Major died peacefully in his sleep. His
    body was buried at the foot of the orchard.

    This was early in March. During the next three months
    there was much secret activity. Major’s speech had given to the
    more intelligent animals on the farm a completely new outlook on
    life. They did not know when the Rebellion predicted by Major
    would take place, they had no reason for thinking that it would be
    within their own lifetime, but they saw clearly that it was their duty
    to prepare for it. The work of teaching and organising the others
    fell naturally upon the pigs, who were generally recognised as
    being the cleverest of the animals. Pre-eminent among the pigs
    were two young boars named Snowball and Napoleon, whom Mr.
    Jones was breeding up for sale. Napoleon was a large, rather fierce-
    looking Berkshire boar, the only Berkshire on the farm, not much
    of a talker, but with a reputation for getting his own way. Snowball
    was a more vivacious pig than Napoleon, quicker in speech and
    more inventive, but was not considered to have the same depth of
    character. All the other male pigs on the farm were porkers. The
    best known among them was a small fat pig named Squealer, with
    very round cheeks, twinkling eyes, nimble movements, and a shrill
    voice. He was a brilliant talker, and when he was arguing some
    difficult point he had a way of skipping from side to side and
    whisking his tail which was somehow very persuasive. The others
    said of Squealer that he could turn black into white.

    These three had elaborated old Major’s teachings into a

    CHAPTER 2

    13

    complete system of thought, to which they gave the name of
    Animalism. Several nights a week, after Mr. Jones was asleep, they
    held secret meetings in the barn and expounded the principles of
    Animalism to the others. At the beginning they met with much
    stupidity and apathy. Some of the animals talked of the duty of
    loyalty to Mr. Jones, whom they referred to as “Master,” or made
    elementary remarks such as “Mr. Jones feeds us. If he were gone,
    we should starve to death.” Others asked such questions as “Why
    should we care what happens after we are dead?” or “If this
    Rebellion is to happen anyway, what difference does it make
    whether we work for it or not?”, and the pigs had great difficulty in
    making them see that this was contrary to the spirit of Animalism.
    The stupidest questions of all were asked by Mollie, the white
    mare. The very first question she asked Snowball was: “Will there
    still be sugar after the Rebellion?”

    “No,” said Snowball firmly. “We have no means of making
    sugar on this farm. Besides, you do not need sugar. You will have
    all the oats and hay you want.”

    “And shall I still be allowed to wear ribbons in my mane?”
    asked Mollie.

    “Comrade,” said Snowball, “those ribbons that you are so
    devoted to are the badge of slavery. Can you not understand that
    liberty is worth more than ribbons?”

    Mollie agreed, but she did not sound very convinced.

    The pigs had an even harder struggle to counteract the lies put
    about by Moses, the tame raven. Moses, who was Mr. Jones’s
    especial pet, was a spy and a tale-bearer, but he was also a clever
    talker. He claimed to know of the existence of a mysterious country
    called Sugarcandy Mountain, to which all animals went when they
    died. It was situated somewhere up in the sky, a little distance

    14

    beyond the clouds, Moses said. In Sugarcandy Mountain it was
    Sunday seven days a week, clover was in season all the year round,
    and lump sugar and linseed cake grew on the hedges. The animals
    hated Moses because he told tales and did no work, but some of
    them believed in Sugarcandy Mountain, and the pigs had to argue
    very hard to persuade them that there was no such place.

    Their most faithful disciples were the two cart-horses, Boxer
    and Clover. These two had great difficulty in thinking anything out
    for themselves, but having once accepted the pigs as their teachers,
    they absorbed everything that they were told, and passed it on to
    the other animals by simple arguments. They were unfailing in
    their attendance at the secret meetings in the barn, and led the
    singing of ‘Beasts of England’, with which the meetings always
    ended.

    Now, as it turned out, the Rebellion was achieved much earlier
    and more easily than anyone had expected. In past years Mr. Jones,
    although a hard master, had been a capable farmer, but of late he
    had fallen on evil days. He had become much disheartened after
    losing money in a lawsuit, and had taken to drinking more than
    was good for him. For whole days at a time he would lounge in his
    Windsor chair in the kitchen, reading the newspapers, drinking,
    and occasionally feeding Moses on crusts of bread soaked in beer.
    His men were idle and dishonest, the fields were full of weeds, the
    buildings wanted roofing, the hedges were neglected, and the
    animals were underfed.

    June came and the hay was almost ready for cutting. On
    Midsummer’s Eve, which was a Saturday, Mr. Jones went into
    Willingdon and got so drunk at the Red Lion that he did not come
    back till midday on Sunday. The men had milked the cows in the
    early morning and then had gone out rabbiting, without bothering

    15

    to feed the animals. When Mr. Jones got back he immediately went
    to sleep on the drawing-room sofa with the News of the World over
    his face, so that when evening came, the animals were still unfed.
    At last they could stand it no longer. One of the cows broke in the
    door of the store-shed with her horn and all the animals began to
    help themselves from the bins. It was just then that Mr. Jones
    woke up. The next moment he and his four men were in the store-
    shed with whips in their hands, lashing out in all directions. This
    was more than the hungry animals could bear. With one accord,
    though nothing of the kind had been planned beforehand, they
    flung themselves upon their tormentors. Jones and his men
    suddenly found themselves being butted and kicked from all sides.
    The situation was quite out of their control. They had never seen
    animals behave like this before, and this sudden uprising of
    creatures whom they were used to thrashing and maltreating just
    as they chose, frightened them almost out of their wits. After only a
    moment or two they gave up trying to defend themselves and took
    to their heels. A minute later all five of them were in full flight
    down the cart-track that led to the main road, with the animals
    pursuing them in triumph.

    Mrs. Jones looked out of the bedroom window, saw what was
    happening, hurriedly flung a few possessions into a carpet bag, and
    slipped out of the farm by another way. Moses sprang off his perch
    and flapped after her, croaking loudly. Meanwhile the animals had
    chased Jones and his men out on to the road and slammed the five-
    barred gate behind them. And so, almost before they knew what
    was happening, the Rebellion had been successfully carried
    through: Jones was expelled, and the Manor Farm was theirs.

    For the first few minutes the animals could hardly believe in
    their good fortune. Their first act was to gallop in a body right

    16

    round the boundaries of the farm, as though to make quite sure
    that no human being was hiding anywhere upon it; then they raced
    back to the farm buildings to wipe out the last traces of Jones’s
    hated reign. The harness-room at the end of the stables was broken
    open; the bits, the nose-rings, the dog-chains, the cruel knives with
    which Mr. Jones had been used to castrate the pigs and lambs,
    were all flung down the well. The reins, the halters, the blinkers,
    the degrading nosebags, were thrown on to the rubbish fire which
    was burning in the yard. So were the whips. All the animals capered
    with joy when they saw the whips going up in flames. Snowball
    also threw on to the fire the ribbons with which the horses’ manes
    and tails had usually been decorated on market days.

    “Ribbons,” he said, “should be considered as clothes, which are
    the mark of a human being. All animals should go naked.”

    When Boxer heard this he fetched the small straw hat which
    he wore in summer to keep the flies out of his ears, and flung it on
    to the fire with the rest.

    In a very little while the animals had destroyed everything that
    reminded them of Mr. Jones. Napoleon then led them back to the
    store-shed and served out a double ration of corn to everybody,
    with two biscuits for each dog. Then they sang ‘Beasts of England’
    from end to end seven times running, and after that they settled
    down for the night and slept as they had never slept before.

    But they woke at dawn as usual, and suddenly remembering
    the glorious thing that had happened, they all raced out into the
    pasture together. A little way down the pasture there was a knoll
    that commanded a view of most of the farm. The animals rushed to
    the top of it and gazed round them in the clear morning light. Yes,
    it was theirs — everything that they could see was theirs! In the
    ecstasy of that thought they gambolled round and round, they

    17

    hurled themselves into the air in great leaps of excitement. They
    rolled in the dew, they cropped mouthfuls of the sweet summer
    grass, they kicked up clods of the black earth and snuffed its rich
    scent. Then they made a tour of inspection of the whole farm and
    surveyed with speechless admiration the ploughland, the hayfield,
    the orchard, the pool, the spinney. It was as though they had never
    seen these things before, and even now they could hardly believe
    that it was all their own.

    Then they filed back to the farm buildings and halted in
    silence outside the door of the farmhouse. That was theirs too, but
    they were frightened to go inside. After a moment, however,
    Snowball and Napoleon butted the door open with their shoulders
    and the animals entered in single file, walking with the utmost care
    for fear of disturbing anything. They tiptoed from room to room,
    afraid to speak above a whisper and gazing with a kind of awe at
    the unbelievable luxury, at the beds with their feather mattresses,
    the looking-glasses, the horsehair sofa, the Brussels carpet, the
    lithograph of Queen Victoria over the drawing-room mantelpiece.
    They were lust coming down the stairs when Mollie was discovered
    to be missing. Going back, the others found that she had remained
    behind in the best bedroom. She had taken a piece of blue ribbon
    from Mrs. Jones’s dressing-table, and was holding it against her
    shoulder and admiring herself in the glass in a very foolish
    manner. The others reproached her sharply, and they went outside.
    Some hams hanging in the kitchen were taken out for burial, and
    the barrel of beer in the scullery was stove in with a kick from
    Boxer’s hoof, otherwise nothing in the house was touched. A
    unanimous resolution was passed on the spot that the farmhouse
    should be preserved as a museum. All were agreed that no animal
    must ever live there.

    18

    The animals had their breakfast, and then Snowball and
    Napoleon called them together again.

    “Comrades,” said Snowball, “it is half-past six and we have a
    long day before us. Today we begin the hay harvest. But there is
    another matter that must be attended to first.”

    The pigs now revealed that during the past three months they
    had taught themselves to read and write from an old spelling book
    which had belonged to Mr. Jones’s children and which had been
    thrown on the rubbish heap. Napoleon sent for pots of black and
    white paint and led the way down to the five-barred gate that gave
    on to the main road. Then Snowball (for it was Snowball who was
    best at writing) took a brush between the two knuckles of his
    trotter, painted out MANOR FARM from the top bar of the gate and
    in its place painted ANIMAL FARM. This was to be the name of the
    farm from now onwards. After this they went back to the farm
    buildings, where Snowball and Napoleon sent for a ladder which
    they caused to be set against the end wall of the big barn. They
    explained that by their studies of the past three months the pigs
    had succeeded in reducing the principles of Animalism to Seven
    Commandments. These Seven Commandments would now be
    inscribed on the wall; they would form an unalterable law by which
    all the animals on Animal Farm must live for ever after. With some
    difficulty (for it is not easy for a pig to balance himself on a ladder)
    Snowball climbed up and set to work, with Squealer a few rungs
    below him holding the paint-pot. The Commandments were
    written on the tarred wall in great white letters that could be read
    thirty yards away. They ran thus:

    THE SEVEN COMMANDMENTS

    1. Whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy.

    19

    2. Whatever goes upon four legs, or has wings, is a friend.

    3. No animal shall wear clothes.

    4. No animal shall sleep in a bed.

    5. No animal shall drink alcohol.

    6. No animal shall kill any other animal.

    7. All animals are equal.

    It was very neatly written, and except that “friend” was written
    “freind” and one of the “S’s” was the wrong way round, the spelling
    was correct all the way through. Snowball read it aloud for the
    benefit of the others. All the animals nodded in complete
    agreement, and the cleverer ones at once began to learn the
    Commandments by heart.

    “Now, comrades,” cried Snowball, throwing down the paint-
    brush, “to the hayfield! Let us make it a point of honour to get in
    the harvest more quickly than Jones and his men could do.”

    But at this moment the three cows, who had seemed uneasy
    for some time past, set up a loud lowing. They had not been milked
    for twenty-four hours, and their udders were almost bursting. After
    a little thought, the pigs sent for buckets and milked the cows fairly
    successfully, their trotters being well adapted to this task. Soon
    there were five buckets of frothing creamy milk at which many of
    the animals looked with considerable interest.

    “What is going to happen to all that milk?” said someone.

    “Jones used sometimes to mix some of it in our mash,” said
    one of the hens.

    “Never mind the milk, comrades!” cried Napoleon, placing
    himself in front of the buckets. “That will be attended to. The
    harvest is more important. Comrade Snowball will lead the way. I
    shall follow in a few minutes. Forward, comrades! The hay is

    20

    waiting.”

    So the animals trooped down to the hayfield to begin the
    harvest, and when they came back in the evening it was noticed
    that the milk had disappeared.

    21

    Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    H
    ow they toiled and sweated to get the hay in! But their
    efforts were rewarded, for the harvest was an even bigger
    success than they had hoped.

    Sometimes the work was hard; the implements had been
    designed for human beings and not for animals, and it was a great
    drawback that no animal was able to use any tool that involved
    standing on his hind legs. But the pigs were so clever that they
    could think of a way round every difficulty. As for the horses, they
    knew every inch of the field, and in fact understood the business of
    mowing and raking far better than Jones and his men had ever
    done. The pigs did not actually work, but directed and supervised
    the others. With their superior knowledge it was natural that they
    should assume the leadership. Boxer and Clover would harness
    themselves to the cutter or the horse-rake (no bits or reins were
    needed in these days, of course) and tramp steadily round and
    round the field with a pig walking behind and calling out “Gee up,
    comrade!” or “Whoa back, comrade!” as the case might be. And
    every animal down to the humblest worked at turning the hay and
    gathering it. Even the ducks and hens toiled to and fro all day in
    the sun, carrying tiny wisps of hay in their beaks. In the end they
    finished the harvest in two days’ less time than it had usually taken
    Jones and his men. Moreover, it was the biggest harvest that the
    farm had ever seen. There was no wastage whatever; the hens and
    ducks with their sharp eyes had gathered up the very last stalk. And
    not an animal on the farm had stolen so much as a mouthful.

    CHAPTER 3

    22

    All through that summer the work of the farm went like
    clockwork. The animals were happy as they had never conceived it
    possible to be. Every mouthful of food was an acute positive
    pleasure, now that it was truly their own food, produced by
    themselves and for themselves, not doled out to them by a
    grudging master. With the worthless parasitical human beings
    gone, there was more for everyone to eat. There was more leisure
    too, inexperienced though the animals were. They met with many
    difficulties — for instance, later in the year, when they harvested
    the corn, they had to tread it out in the ancient style and blow away
    the chaff with their breath, since the farm possessed no threshing
    machine — but the pigs with their cleverness and Boxer with his
    tremendous muscles always pulled them through. Boxer was the
    admiration of everybody. He had been a hard worker even in
    Jones’s time, but now he seemed more like three horses than one;
    there were days when the entire work of the farm seemed to rest
    on his mighty shoulders. From morning to night he was pushing
    and pulling, always at the spot where the work was hardest. He had
    made an arrangement with one of the cockerels to call him in the
    mornings half an hour earlier than anyone else, and would put in
    some volunteer labour at whatever seemed to be most needed,
    before the regular day’s work began. His answer to every problem,
    every setback, was “I will work harder!”— which he had adopted as
    his personal motto.

    But everyone worked according to his capacity. The hens and
    ducks, for instance, saved five bushels of corn at the harvest by
    gathering up the stray grains. Nobody stole, nobody grumbled over
    his rations, the quarrelling and biting and jealousy which had been
    normal features of life in the old days had almost disappeared.
    Nobody shirked — or almost nobody. Mollie, it was true, was not

    23

    good at getting up in the mornings, and had a way of leaving work
    early on the ground that there was a stone in her hoof. And the
    behaviour of the cat was somewhat peculiar. It was soon noticed
    that when there was work to be done the cat could never be found.
    She would vanish for hours on end, and then reappear at meal-
    times, or in the evening after work was over, as though nothing had
    happened. But she always made such excellent excuses, and purred
    so affectionately, that it was impossible not to believe in her good
    intentions. Old Benjamin, the donkey, seemed quite unchanged
    since the Rebellion. He did his work in the same slow obstinate
    way as he had done it in Jones’s time, never shirking and never
    volunteering for extra work either. About the Rebellion and its
    results he would express no opinion. When asked whether he was
    not happier now that Jones was gone, he would say only “Donkeys
    live a long time. None of you has ever seen a dead donkey,” and the
    others had to be content with this cryptic answer.

    On Sundays there was no work. Breakfast was an hour later
    than usual, and after breakfast there was a ceremony which was
    observed every week without fail. First came the hoisting of the
    flag. Snowball had found in the harness-room an old green
    tablecloth of Mrs. Jones’s and had painted on it a hoof and a horn
    in white. This was run up the flagstaff in the farmhouse garden
    every Sunday morning. The flag was green, Snowball explained, to
    represent the green fields of England, while the hoof and horn
    signified the future Republic of the Animals which would arise
    when the human race had been finally overthrown. After the
    hoisting of the flag all the animals trooped into the big barn for a
    general assembly which was known as the Meeting. Here the work
    of the coming week was planned out and resolutions were put
    forward and debated. It was always the pigs who put forward the

    24

    resolutions. The other animals understood how to vote, but could
    never think of any resolutions of their own. Snowball and
    Napoleon were by far the most active in the debates. But it was
    noticed that these two were never in agreement: whatever
    suggestion either of them made, the other could be counted on to
    oppose it. Even when it was resolved — a thing no one could object
    to in itself — to set aside the small paddock behind the orchard as a
    home of rest for animals who were past work, there was a stormy
    debate over the correct retiring age for each class of animal. The
    Meeting always ended with the singing of ‘Beasts of England’, and
    the afternoon was given up to recreation.

    The pigs had set aside the harness-room as a headquarters for
    themselves. Here, in the evenings, they studied blacksmithing,
    carpentering, and other necessary arts from books which they had
    brought out of the farmhouse. Snowball also busied himself with
    organising the other animals into what he called Animal
    Committees. He was indefatigable at this. He formed the Egg
    Production Committee for the hens, the Clean Tails League for the
    cows, the Wild Comrades’ Re-education Committee (the object of
    this was to tame the rats and rabbits), the Whiter Wool Movement
    for the sheep, and various others, besides instituting classes in
    reading and writing. On the whole, these projects were a failure.
    The attempt to tame the wild creatures, for instance, broke down
    almost immediately. They continued to behave very much as
    before, and when treated with generosity, simply took advantage of
    it. The cat joined the Re-education Committee and was very active
    in it for some days. She was seen one day sitting on a roof and
    talking to some sparrows who were just out of her reach. She was
    telling them that all animals were now comrades and that any
    sparrow who chose could come and perch on her paw; but the

    25

    sparrows kept their distance.

    The reading and writing classes, however, were a great success.
    By the autumn almost every animal on the farm was literate in
    some degree.

    As for the pigs, they could already read and write perfectly. The
    dogs learned to read fairly well, but were not interested in reading
    anything except the Seven Commandments. Muriel, the goat, could
    read somewhat better than the dogs, and sometimes used to read
    to the others in the evenings from scraps of newspaper which she
    found on the rubbish heap. Benjamin could read as well as any pig,
    but never exercised his faculty. So far as he knew, he said, there
    was nothing worth reading. Clover learnt the whole alphabet, but
    could not put words together. Boxer could not get beyond the letter
    D. He would trace out A, B, C, D, in the dust with his great hoof,
    and then would stand staring at the letters with his ears back,
    sometimes shaking his forelock, trying with all his might to
    remember what came next and never succeeding. On several
    occasions, indeed, he did learn E, F, G, H, but by the time he knew
    them, it was always discovered that he had forgotten A, B, C, and D.
    Finally he decided to be content with the first four letters, and used
    to write them out once or twice every day to refresh his memory.
    Mollie refused to learn any but the six letters which spelt her own
    name. She would form these very neatly out of pieces of twig, and
    would then decorate them with a flower or two and walk round
    them admiring them.

    None of the other animals on the farm could get further than
    the letter A. It was also found that the stupider animals, such as
    the sheep, hens, and ducks, were unable to learn the Seven
    Commandments by heart. After much thought Snowball declared
    that the Seven Commandments could in effect be reduced to a

    26

    single maxim, namely: “Four legs good, two legs bad.” This, he said,
    contained the essential principle of Animalism. Whoever had
    thoroughly grasped it would be safe from human influences. The
    birds at first objected, since it seemed to them that they also had
    two legs, but Snowball proved to them that this was not so.

    “A bird’s wing, comrades,” he said, “is an organ of propulsion
    and not of manipulation. It should therefore be regarded as a leg.
    The distinguishing mark of man is the HAND, the instrument with
    which he does all his mischief.”

    The birds did not understand Snowball’s long words, but they
    accepted his explanation, and all the humbler animals set to work
    to learn the new maxim by heart. FOUR LEGS GOOD, TWO LEGS
    BAD, was inscribed on the end wall of the barn, above the Seven
    Commandments and in bigger letters. When they had once got it by
    heart, the sheep developed a great liking for this maxim, and often
    as they lay in the field they would all start bleating “Four legs good,
    two legs bad! Four legs good, two legs bad!” and keep it up for
    hours on end, never growing tired of it.

    Napoleon took no interest in Snowball’s committees. He said
    that the education of the young was more important than anything
    that could be done for those who were already grown up. It
    happened that Jessie and Bluebell had both whelped soon after the
    hay harvest, giving birth between them to nine sturdy puppies. As
    soon as they were weaned, Napoleon took them away from their
    mothers, saying that he would make himself responsible for their
    education. He took them up into a loft which could only be reached
    by a ladder from the harness-room, and there kept them in such
    seclusion that the rest of the farm soon forgot their existence.

    The mystery of where the milk went to was soon cleared up. It
    was mixed every day into the pigs’ mash. The early apples were

    27

    now ripening, and the grass of the orchard was littered with
    windfalls. The animals had assumed as a matter of course that
    these would be shared out equally; one day, however, the order
    went forth that all the windfalls were to be collected and brought to
    the harness-room for the use of the pigs. At this some of the other
    animals murmured, but it was no use. All the pigs were in full
    agreement on this point, even Snowball and Napoleon. Squealer
    was sent to make the necessary explanations to the others.

    “Comrades!” he cried. “You do not imagine, I hope, that we
    pigs are doing this in a spirit of selfishness and privilege? Many of
    us actually dislike milk and apples. I dislike them myself. Our sole
    object in taking these things is to preserve our health. Milk and
    apples (this has been proved by Science, comrades) contain
    substances absolutely necessary to the well-being of a pig. We pigs
    are brainworkers. The whole management and organisation of this
    farm depend on us. Day and night we are watching over your
    welfare. It is for YOUR sake that we drink that milk and eat those
    apples. Do you know what would happen if we pigs failed in our
    duty? Jones would come back! Yes, Jones would come back!
    Surely, comrades,” cried Squealer almost pleadingly, skipping from
    side to side and whisking his tail, “surely there is no one among
    you who wants to see Jones come back?”

    Now if there was one thing that the animals were completely
    certain of, it was that they did not want Jones back. When it was
    put to them in this light, they had no more to say. The importance
    of keeping the pigs in good health was all too obvious. So it was
    agreed without further argument that the milk and the windfall
    apples (and also the main crop of apples when they ripened)
    should be reserved for the pigs alone.

    28

    29

    Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    B
    y the late summer the news of what had happened on
    Animal Farm had spread across half the county. Every day
    Snowball and Napoleon sent out flights of pigeons whose

    instructions were to mingle with the animals on neighbouring
    farms, tell them the story of the Rebellion, and teach them the
    tune of ‘Beasts of England’.

    Most of this time Mr. Jones had spent sitting in the taproom
    of the Red Lion at Willingdon, complaining to anyone who would
    listen of the monstrous injustice he had suffered in being turned
    out of his property by a pack of good-for-nothing animals. The
    other farmers sympathised in principle, but they did not at first
    give him much help. At heart, each of them was secretly wondering
    whether he could not somehow turn Jones’s misfortune to his own
    advantage. It was lucky that the owners of the two farms which
    adjoined Animal Farm were on permanently bad terms. One of
    them, which was named Foxwood, was a large, neglected, old-
    fashioned farm, much overgrown by woodland, with all its pastures
    worn out and its hedges in a disgraceful condition. Its owner, Mr.
    Pilkington, was an easy-going gentleman farmer who spent most of
    his time in fishing or hunting according to the season. The other
    farm, which was called Pinchfield, was smaller and better kept. Its
    owner was a Mr. Frederick, a tough, shrewd man, perpetually
    involved in lawsuits and with a name for driving hard bargains.
    These two disliked each other so much that it was difficult for
    them to come to any agreement, even in defence of their own

    CHAPTER 4

    30

    interests.

    Nevertheless, they were both thoroughly frightened by the
    rebellion on Animal Farm, and very anxious to prevent their own
    animals from learning too much about it. At first they pretended to
    laugh to scorn the idea of animals managing a farm for themselves.
    The whole thing would be over in a fortnight, they said. They put it
    about that the animals on the Manor Farm (they insisted on calling
    it the Manor Farm; they would not tolerate the name “Animal
    Farm”) were perpetually fighting among themselves and were also
    rapidly starving to death. When time passed and the animals had
    evidently not starved to death, Frederick and Pilkington changed
    their tune and began to talk of the terrible wickedness that now
    flourished on Animal Farm. It was given out that the animals there
    practised cannibalism, tortured one another with red-hot
    horseshoes, and had their females in common. This was what came
    of rebelling against the laws of Nature, Frederick and Pilkington
    said.

    However, these stories were never fully believed. Rumours of
    a wonderful farm, where the human beings had been turned out
    and the animals managed their own affairs, continued to circulate
    in vague and distorted forms, and throughout that year a wave of
    rebelliousness ran through the countryside. Bulls which had
    always been tractable suddenly turned savage, sheep broke down
    hedges and devoured the clover, cows kicked the pail over, hunters
    refused their fences and shot their riders on to the other side.
    Above all, the tune and even the words of ‘Beasts of England’ were
    known everywhere. It had spread with astonishing speed. The
    human beings could not contain their rage when they heard this
    song, though they pretended to think it merely ridiculous. They
    could not understand, they said, how even animals could bring

    31

    themselves to sing such contemptible rubbish. Any animal caught
    singing it was given a flogging on the spot. And yet the song was
    irrepressible. The blackbirds whistled it in the hedges, the pigeons
    cooed it in the elms, it got into the din of the smithies and the tune
    of the church bells. And when the human beings listened to it, they
    secretly trembled, hearing in it a prophecy of their future doom.

    Early in October, when the corn was cut and stacked and some
    of it was already threshed, a flight of pigeons came whirling
    through the air and alighted in the yard of Animal Farm in the
    wildest excitement. Jones and all his men, with half a dozen others
    from Foxwood and Pinchfield, had entered the five-barred gate and
    were coming up the cart-track that led to the farm. They were all
    carrying sticks, except Jones, who was marching ahead with a gun
    in his hands. Obviously they were going to attempt the recapture of
    the farm.

    This had long been expected, and all preparations had been
    made. Snowball, who had studied an old book of Julius Caesar’s
    campaigns which he had found in the farmhouse, was in charge of
    the defensive operations. He gave his orders quickly, and in a
    couple of minutes every animal was at his post.

    As the human beings approached the farm buildings, Snowball
    launched his first attack. All the pigeons, to the number of thirty-
    five, flew to and fro over the men’s heads and muted upon them
    from mid-air; and while the men were dealing with this, the geese,
    who had been hiding behind the hedge, rushed out and pecked
    viciously at the calves of their legs. However, this was only a light
    skirmishing manoeuvre, intended to create a little disorder, and the
    men easily drove the geese off with their sticks. Snowball now
    launched his second line of attack. Muriel, Benjamin, and all the
    sheep, with Snowball at the head of them, rushed forward and

    32

    prodded and butted the men from every side, while Benjamin
    turned around and lashed at them with his small hoofs. But once
    again the men, with their sticks and their hobnailed boots, were too
    strong for them; and suddenly, at a squeal from Snowball, which
    was the signal for retreat, all the animals turned and fled through
    the gateway into the yard.

    The men gave a shout of triumph. They saw, as they imagined,
    their enemies in flight, and they rushed after them in disorder.
    This was just what Snowball had intended. As soon as they were
    well inside the yard, the three horses, the three cows, and the rest
    of the pigs, who had been lying in ambush in the cowshed,
    suddenly emerged in their rear, cutting them off. Snowball now
    gave the signal for the charge. He himself dashed straight for
    Jones. Jones saw him coming, raised his gun and fired. The pellets
    scored bloody streaks along Snowball’s back, and a sheep dropped
    dead. Without halting for an instant, Snowball flung his fifteen
    stone against Jones’s legs. Jones was hurled into a pile of dung and
    his gun flew out of his hands. But the most terrifying spectacle of
    all was Boxer, rearing up on his hind legs and striking out with his
    great iron-shod hoofs like a stallion. His very first blow took a
    stable-lad from Foxwood on the skull and stretched him lifeless in
    the mud. At the sight, several men dropped their sticks and tried to
    run. Panic overtook them, and the next moment all the animals
    together were chasing them round and round the yard. They were
    gored, kicked, bitten, trampled on. There was not an animal on the
    farm that did not take vengeance on them after his own fashion.
    Even the cat suddenly leapt off a roof onto a cowman’s shoulders
    and sank her claws in his neck, at which he yelled horribly. At a
    moment when the opening was clear, the men were glad enough to
    rush out of the yard and make a bolt for the main road. And so

    33

    within five minutes of their invasion they were in ignominious
    retreat by the same way as they had come, with a flock of geese
    hissing after them and pecking at their calves all the way.

    All the men were gone except one. Back in the yard Boxer was
    pawing with his hoof at the stable-lad who lay face down in the
    mud, trying to turn him over. The boy did not stir.

    “He is dead,” said Boxer sorrowfully. “I had no intention of
    doing that. I forgot that I was wearing iron shoes. Who will believe
    that I did not do this on purpose?”

    “No sentimentality, comrade!” cried Snowball from whose
    wounds the blood was still dripping. “War is war. The only good
    human being is a dead one.”

    “I have no wish to take life, not even human life,” repeated
    Boxer, and his eyes were full of tears.

    “Where is Mollie?” exclaimed somebody.

    Mollie in fact was missing. For a moment there was great
    alarm; it was feared that the men might have harmed her in some
    way, or even carried her off with them. In the end, however, she
    was found hiding in her stall with her head buried among the hay
    in the manger. She had taken to flight as soon as the gun went off.
    And when the others came back from looking for her, it was to find
    that the stable-lad, who in fact was only stunned, had already
    recovered and made off.

    The animals had now reassembled in the wildest excitement,
    each recounting his own exploits in the battle at the top of his
    voice. An impromptu celebration of the victory was held
    immediately. The flag was run up and ‘Beasts of England’ was sung
    a number of times, then the sheep who had been killed was given a
    solemn funeral, a hawthorn bush being planted on her grave. At
    the graveside Snowball made a little speech, emphasising the need

    34

    for all animals to be ready to die for Animal Farm if need be.

    The animals decided unanimously to create a military
    decoration, “Animal Hero, First Class,” which was conferred there
    and then on Snowball and Boxer. It consisted of a brass medal
    (they were really some old horse-brasses which had been found in
    the harness-room), to be worn on Sundays and holidays. There was
    also “Animal Hero, Second Class,” which was conferred
    posthumously on the dead sheep.

    There was much discussion as to what the battle should be
    called. In the end, it was named the Battle of the Cowshed, since
    that was where the ambush had been sprung. Mr. Jones’s gun had
    been found lying in the mud, and it was known that there was a
    supply of cartridges in the farmhouse. It was decided to set the gun
    up at the foot of the Flagstaff, like a piece of artillery, and to fire it
    twice a year — once on October the twelfth, the anniversary of the
    Battle of the Cowshed, and once on Midsummer Day, the
    anniversary of the Rebellion.

    35

    Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    A
    s winter drew on, Mollie became more and more
    troublesome. She was late for work every morning and
    excused herself by saying that she had overslept, and she

    complained of mysterious pains, although her appetite was
    excellent. On every kind of pretext she would run away from work
    and go to the drinking pool, where she would stand foolishly gazing
    at her own reflection in the water. But there were also rumours of
    something more serious. One day, as Mollie strolled blithely into
    the yard, flirting her long tail and chewing at a stalk of hay, Clover
    took her aside.

    “Mollie,” she said, “I have something very serious to say to
    you. This morning I saw you looking over the hedge that divides
    Animal Farm from Foxwood. One of Mr. Pilkington’s men was
    standing on the other side of the hedge. And — I was a long way
    away, but I am almost certain I saw this — he was talking to you
    and you were allowing him to stroke your nose. What does that
    mean, Mollie?”

    “He didn’t! I wasn’t! It isn’t true!” cried Mollie, beginning to
    prance about and paw the ground.

    “Mollie! Look me in the face. Do you give me your word of
    honour that that man was not stroking your nose?”

    “It isn’t true!” repeated Mollie, but she could not look Clover
    in the face, and the next moment she took to her heels and
    galloped away into the field.

    A thought struck Clover. Without saying anything to the

    CHAPTER 5

    36

    others, she went to Mollie’s stall and turned over the straw with
    her hoof. Hidden under the straw was a little pile of lump sugar
    and several bunches of ribbon of different colours.

    Three days later Mollie disappeared. For some weeks nothing
    was known of her whereabouts, then the pigeons reported that
    they had seen her on the other side of Willingdon. She was
    between the shafts of a smart dogcart painted red and black, which
    was standing outside a public-house. A fat red-faced man in check
    breeches and gaiters, who looked like a publican, was stroking her
    nose and feeding her with sugar. Her coat was newly clipped and
    she wore a scarlet ribbon round her forelock. She appeared to be
    enjoying herself, so the pigeons said. None of the animals ever
    mentioned Mollie again.

    In January there came bitterly hard weather. The earth was
    like iron, and nothing could be done in the fields. Many meetings
    were held in the big barn, and the pigs occupied themselves with
    planning out the work of the coming season. It had come to be
    accepted that the pigs, who were manifestly cleverer than the other
    animals, should decide all questions of farm policy, though their
    decisions had to be ratified by a majority vote. This arrangement
    would have worked well enough if it had not been for the disputes
    between Snowball and Napoleon. These two disagreed at every
    point where disagreement was possible. If one of them suggested
    sowing a bigger acreage with barley, the other was certain to
    demand a bigger acreage of oats, and if one of them said that such
    and such a field was just right for cabbages, the other would
    declare that it was useless for anything except roots. Each had his
    own following, and there were some violent debates. At the
    Meetings Snowball often won over the majority by his brilliant
    speeches, but Napoleon was better at canvassing support for

    37

    himself in between times. He was especially successful with the
    sheep. Of late the sheep had taken to bleating “Four legs good, two
    legs bad” both in and out of season, and they often interrupted the
    Meeting with this. It was noticed that they were especially liable to
    break into “Four legs good, two legs bad” at crucial moments in
    Snowball’s speeches. Snowball had made a close study of some
    back numbers of the ‘Farmer and Stockbreeder’ which he had
    found in the farmhouse, and was full of plans for innovations and
    improvements. He talked learnedly about field drains, silage, and
    basic slag, and had worked out a complicated scheme for all the
    animals to drop their dung directly in the fields, at a different spot
    every day, to save the labour of cartage. Napoleon produced no
    schemes of his own, but said quietly that Snowball’s would come to
    nothing, and seemed to be biding his time. But of all their
    controversies, none was so bitter as the one that took place over
    the windmill.

    In the long pasture, not far from the farm buildings, there was
    a small knoll which was the highest point on the farm. After
    surveying the ground, Snowball declared that this was just the
    place for a windmill, which could be made to operate a dynamo and
    supply the farm with electrical power. This would light the stalls
    and warm them in winter, and would also run a circular saw, a
    chaff-cutter, a mangel-slicer, and an electric milking machine. The
    animals had never heard of anything of this kind before (for the
    farm was an old-fashioned one and had only the most primitive
    machinery), and they listened in astonishment while Snowball
    conjured up pictures of fantastic machines which would do their
    work for them while they grazed at their ease in the fields or
    improved their minds with reading and conversation.

    Within a few weeks Snowball’s plans for the windmill were

    38

    fully worked out. The mechanical details came mostly from three
    books which had belonged to Mr. Jones —‘One Thousand Useful
    Things to Do About the House’, ‘Every Man His Own Bricklayer’,
    and ‘Electricity for Beginners’. Snowball used as his study a shed
    which had once been used for incubators and had a smooth
    wooden floor, suitable for drawing on. He was closeted there for
    hours at a time. With his books held open by a stone, and with a
    piece of chalk gripped between the knuckles of his trotter, he
    would move rapidly to and fro, drawing in line after line and
    uttering little whimpers of excitement. Gradually the plans grew
    into a complicated mass of cranks and cog-wheels, covering more
    than half the floor, which the other animals found completely
    unintelligible but very impressive. All of them came to look at
    Snowball’s drawings at least once a day. Even the hens and ducks
    came, and were at pains not to tread on the chalk marks. Only
    Napoleon held aloof. He had declared himself against the windmill
    from the start. One day, however, he arrived unexpectedly to
    examine the plans. He walked heavily round the shed, looked
    closely at every detail of the plans and snuffed at them once or
    twice, then stood for a little while contemplating them out of the
    corner of his eye; then suddenly he lifted his leg, urinated over the
    plans, and walked out without uttering a word.

    The whole farm was deeply divided on the subject of the
    windmill. Snowball did not deny that to build it would be a difficult
    business. Stone would have to be carried and built up into walls,
    then the sails would have to be made and after that there would be
    need for dynamos and cables. (How these were to be procured,
    Snowball did not say.) But he maintained that it could all be done
    in a year. And thereafter, he declared, so much labour would be
    saved that the animals would only need to work three days a week.

    39

    Napoleon, on the other hand, argued that the great need of the
    moment was to increase food production, and that if they wasted
    time on the windmill they would all starve to death. The animals
    formed themselves into two factions under the slogan, “Vote for
    Snowball and the three-day week” and “Vote for Napoleon and the
    full manger.” Benjamin was the only animal who did not side with
    either faction. He refused to believe either that food would become
    more plentiful or that the windmill would save work. Windmill or
    no windmill, he said, life would go on as it had always gone on —
    that is, badly.

    Apart from the disputes over the windmill, there was the
    question of the defence of the farm. It was fully realised that
    though the human beings had been defeated in the Battle of the
    Cowshed they might make another and more determined attempt
    to recapture the farm and reinstate Mr. Jones. They had all the
    more reason for doing so because the news of their defeat had
    spread across the countryside and made the animals on the
    neighbouring farms more restive than ever. As usual, Snowball and
    Napoleon were in disagreement. According to Napoleon, what the
    animals must do was to procure firearms and train themselves in
    the use of them. According to Snowball, they must send out more
    and more pigeons and stir up rebellion among the animals on the
    other farms. The one argued that if they could not defend
    themselves they were bound to be conquered, the other argued that
    if rebellions happened everywhere they would have no need to
    defend themselves. The animals listened first to Napoleon, then to
    Snowball, and could not make up their minds which was right;
    indeed, they always found themselves in agreement with the one
    who was speaking at the moment.

    At last the day came when Snowball’s plans were completed.

    40

    At the Meeting on the following Sunday the question of whether or
    not to begin work on the windmill was to be put to the vote. When
    the animals had assembled in the big barn, Snowball stood up and,
    though occasionally interrupted by bleating from the sheep, set
    forth his reasons for advocating the building of the windmill. Then
    Napoleon stood up to reply. He said very quietly that the windmill
    was nonsense and that he advised nobody to vote for it, and
    promptly sat down again; he had spoken for barely thirty seconds,
    and seemed almost indifferent as to the effect he produced. At this
    Snowball sprang to his feet, and shouting down the sheep, who had
    begun bleating again, broke into a passionate appeal in favour of
    the windmill. Until now the animals had been about equally
    divided in their sympathies, but in a moment Snowball’s eloquence
    had carried them away. In glowing sentences he painted a picture
    of Animal Farm as it might be when sordid labour was lifted from
    the animals’ backs. His imagination had now run far beyond chaff-
    cutters and turnip-slicers. Electricity, he said, could operate
    threshing machines, ploughs, harrows, rollers, and reapers and
    binders, besides supplying every stall with its own electric light, hot
    and cold water, and an electric heater. By the time he had finished
    speaking, there was no doubt as to which way the vote would go.
    But just at this moment Napoleon stood up and, casting a peculiar
    sidelong look at Snowball, uttered a high-pitched whimper of a
    kind no one had ever heard him utter before.

    At this there was a terrible baying sound outside, and nine
    enormous dogs wearing brass-studded collars came bounding into
    the barn. They dashed straight for Snowball, who only sprang from
    his place just in time to escape their snapping jaws. In a moment
    he was out of the door and they were after him. Too amazed and
    frightened to speak, all the animals crowded through the door to

    41

    watch the chase. Snowball was racing across the long pasture that
    led to the road. He was running as only a pig can run, but the dogs
    were close on his heels. Suddenly he slipped and it seemed certain
    that they had him. Then he was up again, running faster than ever,
    then the dogs were gaining on him again. One of them all but
    closed his jaws on Snowball’s tail, but Snowball whisked it free just
    in time. Then he put on an extra spurt and, with a few inches to
    spare, slipped through a hole in the hedge and was seen no more.

    Silent and terrified, the animals crept back into the barn. In a
    moment the dogs came bounding back. At first no one had been
    able to imagine where these creatures came from, but the problem
    was soon solved: they were the puppies whom Napoleon had taken
    away from their mothers and reared privately. Though not yet full-
    grown, they were huge dogs, and as fierce-looking as wolves. They
    kept close to Napoleon. It was noticed that they wagged their tails
    to him in the same way as the other dogs had been used to do to
    Mr. Jones.

    Napoleon, with the dogs following him, now mounted on to
    the raised portion of the floor where Major had previously stood to
    deliver his speech. He announced that from now on the Sunday-
    morning Meetings would come to an end. They were unnecessary,
    he said, and wasted time. In future all questions relating to the
    working of the farm would be settled by a special committee of
    pigs, presided over by himself. These would meet in private and
    afterwards communicate their decisions to the others. The animals
    would still assemble on Sunday mornings to salute the flag, sing
    ‘Beasts of England’, and receive their orders for the week; but there
    would be no more debates.

    In spite of the shock that Snowball’s expulsion had given
    them, the animals were dismayed by this announcement. Several

    42

    of them would have protested if they could have found the right
    arguments. Even Boxer was vaguely troubled. He set his ears back,
    shook his forelock several times, and tried hard to marshal his
    thoughts; but in the end he could not think of anything to say.
    Some of the pigs themselves, however, were more articulate. Four
    young porkers in the front row uttered shrill squeals of
    disapproval, and all four of them sprang to their feet and began
    speaking at once. But suddenly the dogs sitting round Napoleon let
    out deep, menacing growls, and the pigs fell silent and sat down
    again. Then the sheep broke out into a tremendous bleating of
    “Four legs good, two legs bad!” which went on for nearly a quarter
    of an hour and put an end to any chance of discussion.

    Afterwards Squealer was sent round the farm to explain the
    new arrangement to the others.

    “Comrades,” he said, “I trust that every animal here
    appreciates the sacrifice that Comrade Napoleon has made in
    taking this extra labour upon himself. Do not imagine, comrades,
    that leadership is a pleasure! On the contrary, it is a deep and
    heavy responsibility. No one believes more firmly than Comrade
    Napoleon that all animals are equal. He would be only too happy to
    let you make your decisions for yourselves. But sometimes you
    might make the wrong decisions, comrades, and then where should
    we be? Suppose you had decided to follow Snowball, with his
    moonshine of windmills — Snowball, who, as we now know, was
    no better than a criminal?”

    “He fought bravely at the Battle of the Cowshed,” said
    somebody.

    “Bravery is not enough,” said Squealer. “Loyalty and obedience
    are more important. And as to the Battle of the Cowshed, I believe
    the time will come when we shall find that Snowball’s part in it was

    43

    much exaggerated. Discipline, comrades, iron discipline! That is
    the watchword for today. One false step, and our enemies would be
    upon us. Surely, comrades, you do not want Jones back?”

    Once again this argument was unanswerable. Certainly the
    animals did not want Jones back; if the holding of debates on
    Sunday mornings was liable to bring him back, then the debates
    must stop. Boxer, who had now had time to think things over,
    voiced the general feeling by saying: “If Comrade Napoleon says it,
    it must be right.” And from then on he adopted the maxim,
    “Napoleon is always right,” in addition to his private motto of “I
    will work harder.”

    By this time the weather had broken and the spring ploughing
    had begun. The shed where Snowball had drawn his plans of the
    windmill had been shut up and it was assumed that the plans had
    been rubbed off the floor. Every Sunday morning at ten o’clock the
    animals assembled in the big barn to receive their orders for the
    week. The skull of old Major, now clean of flesh, had been
    disinterred from the orchard and set up on a stump at the foot of
    the flagstaff, beside the gun. After the hoisting of the flag, the
    animals were required to file past the skull in a reverent manner
    before entering the barn. Nowadays they did not sit all together as
    they had done in the past. Napoleon, with Squealer and another pig
    named Minimus, who had a remarkable gift for composing songs
    and poems, sat on the front of the raised platform, with the nine
    young dogs forming a semicircle round them, and the other pigs
    sitting behind. The rest of the animals sat facing them in the main
    body of the barn. Napoleon read out the orders for the week in a
    gruff soldierly style, and after a single singing of ‘Beasts of
    England’, all the animals dispersed.

    On the third Sunday after Snowball’s expulsion, the animals

    44

    were somewhat surprised to hear Napoleon announce that the
    windmill was to be built after all. He did not give any reason for
    having changed his mind, but merely warned the animals that this
    extra task would mean very hard work, it might even be necessary
    to reduce their rations. The plans, however, had all been prepared,
    down to the last detail. A special committee of pigs had been at
    work upon them for the past three weeks. The building of the
    windmill, with various other improvements, was expected to take
    two years.

    That evening Squealer explained privately to the other animals
    that Napoleon had never in reality been opposed to the windmill.
    On the contrary, it was he who had advocated it in the beginning,
    and the plan which Snowball had drawn on the floor of the
    incubator shed had actually been stolen from among Napoleon’s
    papers. The windmill was, in fact, Napoleon’s own creation. Why,
    then, asked somebody, had he spoken so strongly against it? Here
    Squealer looked very sly. That, he said, was Comrade Napoleon’s
    cunning. He had SEEMED to oppose the windmill, simply as a
    manoeuvre to get rid of Snowball, who was a dangerous character
    and a bad influence. Now that Snowball was out of the way, the
    plan could go forward without his interference. This, said Squealer,
    was something called tactics. He repeated a number of times,
    “Tactics, comrades, tactics!” skipping round and whisking his tail
    with a merry laugh. The animals were not certain what the word
    meant, but Squealer spoke so persuasively, and the three dogs who
    happened to be with him growled so threateningly, that they
    accepted his explanation without further questions.

    45

    46

    Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    A
    ll that year the animals worked like slaves. But they were
    happy in their work; they grudged no effort or sacrifice,
    well aware that everything that they did was for the benefit

    of themselves and those of their kind who would come after them,
    and not for a pack of idle, thieving human beings.

    Throughout the spring and summer they worked a sixty-hour
    week, and in August Napoleon announced that there would be
    work on Sunday afternoons as well. This work was strictly
    voluntary, but any animal who absented himself from it would
    have his rations reduced by half. Even so, it was found necessary to
    leave certain tasks undone. The harvest was a little less successful
    than in the previous year, and two fields which should have been
    sown with roots in the early summer were not sown because the
    ploughing had not been completed early enough. It was possible to
    foresee that the coming winter would be a hard one.

    The windmill presented unexpected difficulties. There was a
    good quarry of limestone on the farm, and plenty of sand and
    cement had been found in one of the outhouses, so that all the
    materials for building were at hand. But the problem the animals
    could not at first solve was how to break up the stone into pieces of
    suitable size. There seemed no way of doing this except with picks
    and crowbars, which no animal could use, because no animal could
    stand on his hind legs. Only after weeks of vain effort did the right
    idea occur to somebody-namely, to utilise the force of gravity.
    Huge boulders, far too big to be used as they were, were lying all

    CHAPTER 6

    47

    over the bed of the quarry. The animals lashed ropes round these,
    and then all together, cows, horses, sheep, any animal that could
    lay hold of the rope — even the pigs sometimes joined in at critical
    moments — they dragged them with desperate slowness up the
    slope to the top of the quarry, where they were toppled over the
    edge, to shatter to pieces below. Transporting the stone when it
    was once broken was comparatively simple. The horses carried it
    off in cart-loads, the sheep dragged single blocks, even Muriel and
    Benjamin yoked themselves into an old governess-cart and did
    their share. By late summer a sufficient store of stone had
    accumulated, and then the building began, under the
    superintendence of the pigs.

    But it was a slow, laborious process. Frequently it took a whole
    day of exhausting effort to drag a single boulder to the top of the
    quarry, and sometimes when it was pushed over the edge it failed
    to break. Nothing could have been achieved without Boxer, whose
    strength seemed equal to that of all the rest of the animals put
    together. When the boulder began to slip and the animals cried out
    in despair at finding themselves dragged down the hill, it was
    always Boxer who strained himself against the rope and brought
    the boulder to a stop. To see him toiling up the slope inch by inch,
    his breath coming fast, the tips of his hoofs clawing at the ground,
    and his great sides matted with sweat, filled everyone with
    admiration. Clover warned him sometimes to be careful not to
    overstrain himself, but Boxer would never listen to her. His two
    slogans, “I will work harder” and “Napoleon is always right,”
    seemed to him a sufficient answer to all problems. He had made
    arrangements with the cockerel to call him three-quarters of an
    hour earlier in the mornings instead of half an hour. And in his
    spare moments, of which there were not many nowadays, he would

    48

    go alone to the quarry, collect a load of broken stone, and drag it
    down to the site of the windmill unassisted.

    The animals were not badly off throughout that summer, in
    spite of the hardness of their work. If they had no more food than
    they had had in Jones’s day, at least they did not have less. The
    advantage of only having to feed themselves, and not having to
    support five extravagant human beings as well, was so great that it
    would have taken a lot of failures to outweigh it. And in many ways
    the animal method of doing things was more efficient and saved
    labour. Such jobs as weeding, for instance, could be done with a
    thoroughness impossible to human beings. And again, since no
    animal now stole, it was unnecessary to fence off pasture from
    arable land, which saved a lot of labour on the upkeep of hedges
    and gates. Nevertheless, as the summer wore on, various
    unforeseen shortages began to make them selves felt. There was
    need of paraffin oil, nails, string, dog biscuits, and iron for the
    horses’ shoes, none of which could be produced on the farm. Later
    there would also be need for seeds and artificial manures, besides
    various tools and, finally, the machinery for the windmill. How
    these were to be procured, no one was able to imagine.

    One Sunday morning, when the animals assembled to receive
    their orders, Napoleon announced that he had decided upon a new
    policy. From now onwards Animal Farm would engage in trade
    with the neighbouring farms: not, of course, for any commercial
    purpose, but simply in order to obtain certain materials which were
    urgently necessary. The needs of the windmill must override
    everything else, he said. He was therefore making arrangements to
    sell a stack of hay and part of the current year’s wheat crop, and
    later on, if more money were needed, it would have to be made up
    by the sale of eggs, for which there was always a market in

    49

    Willingdon. The hens, said Napoleon, should welcome this sacrifice
    as their own special contribution towards the building of the
    windmill.

    Once again the animals were conscious of a vague uneasiness.
    Never to have any dealings with human beings, never to engage in
    trade, never to make use of money — had not these been among
    the earliest resolutions passed at that first triumphant Meeting
    after Jones was expelled? All the animals remembered passing
    such resolutions: or at least they thought that they remembered it.
    The four young pigs who had protested when Napoleon abolished
    the Meetings raised their voices timidly, but they were promptly
    silenced by a tremendous growling from the dogs. Then, as usual,
    the sheep broke into “Four legs good, two legs bad!” and the
    momentary awkwardness was smoothed over. Finally Napoleon
    raised his trotter for silence and announced that he had already
    made all the arrangements. There would be no need for any of the
    animals to come in contact with human beings, which would
    clearly be most undesirable. He intended to take the whole burden
    upon his own shoulders. A Mr. Whymper, a solicitor living in
    Willingdon, had agreed to act as intermediary between Animal
    Farm and the outside world, and would visit the farm every
    Monday morning to receive his instructions. Napoleon ended his
    speech with his usual cry of “Long live Animal Farm!” and after the
    singing of ‘Beasts of England’ the animals were dismissed.

    Afterwards Squealer made a round of the farm and set the
    animals’ minds at rest. He assured them that the resolution against
    engaging in trade and using money had never been passed, or even
    suggested. It was pure imagination, probably traceable in the
    beginning to lies circulated by Snowball. A few animals still felt
    faintly doubtful, but Squealer asked them shrewdly, “Are you

    50

    certain that this is not something that you have dreamed,
    comrades? Have you any record of such a resolution? Is it written
    down anywhere?” And since it was certainly true that nothing of
    the kind existed in writing, the animals were satisfied that they had
    been mistaken.

    Every Monday Mr. Whymper visited the farm as had been
    arranged. He was a sly-looking little man with side whiskers, a
    solicitor in a very small way of business, but sharp enough to have
    realised earlier than anyone else that Animal Farm would need a
    broker and that the commissions would be worth having. The
    animals watched his coming and going with a kind of dread, and
    avoided him as much as possible. Nevertheless, the sight of
    Napoleon, on all fours, delivering orders to Whymper, who stood
    on two legs, roused their pride and partly reconciled them to the
    new arrangement. Their relations with the human race were now
    not quite the same as they had been before. The human beings did
    not hate Animal Farm any less now that it was prospering; indeed,
    they hated it more than ever. Every human being held it as an
    article of faith that the farm would go bankrupt sooner or later,
    and, above all, that the windmill would be a failure. They would
    meet in the public-houses and prove to one another by means of
    diagrams that the windmill was bound to fall down, or that if it did
    stand up, then that it would never work. And yet, against their will,
    they had developed a certain respect for the efficiency with which
    the animals were managing their own affairs. One symptom of this
    was that they had begun to call Animal Farm by its proper name
    and ceased to pretend that it was called the Manor Farm. They had
    also dropped their championship of Jones, who had given up hope
    of getting his farm back and gone to live in another part of the
    county. Except through Whymper, there was as yet no contact

    51

    between Animal Farm and the outside world, but there were
    constant rumours that Napoleon was about to enter into a definite
    business agreement either with Mr. Pilkington of Foxwood or with
    Mr. Frederick of Pinchfield — but never, it was noticed, with both
    simultaneously.

    It was about this time that the pigs suddenly moved into the
    farmhouse and took up their residence there. Again the animals
    seemed to remember that a resolution against this had been passed
    in the early days, and again Squealer was able to convince them
    that this was not the case. It was absolutely necessary, he said, that
    the pigs, who were the brains of the farm, should have a quiet place
    to work in. It was also more suited to the dignity of the Leader (for
    of late he had taken to speaking of Napoleon under the title of
    “Leader”) to live in a house than in a mere sty. Nevertheless, some
    of the animals were disturbed when they heard that the pigs not
    only took their meals in the kitchen and used the drawing-room as
    a recreation room, but also slept in the beds. Boxer passed it off as
    usual with “Napoleon is always right!”, but Clover, who thought
    she remembered a definite ruling against beds, went to the end of
    the barn and tried to puzzle out the Seven Commandments which
    were inscribed there. Finding herself unable to read more than
    individual letters, she fetched Muriel.

    “Muriel,” she said, “read me the Fourth Commandment. Does
    it not say something about never sleeping in a bed?”

    With some difficulty Muriel spelt it out.

    “It says, ‘No animal shall sleep in a bed with sheets,”’ she
    announced finally.

    Curiously enough, Clover had not remembered that the Fourth
    Commandment mentioned sheets; but as it was there on the wall,
    it must have done so. And Squealer, who happened to be passing at

    52

    this moment, attended by two or three dogs, was able to put the
    whole matter in its proper perspective.

    “You have heard then, comrades,” he said, “that we pigs now
    sleep in the beds of the farmhouse? And why not? You did not
    suppose, surely, that there was ever a ruling against beds? A bed
    merely means a place to sleep in. A pile of straw in a stall is a bed,
    properly regarded. The rule was against sheets, which are a human
    invention. We have removed the sheets from the farmhouse beds,
    and sleep between blankets. And very comfortable beds they are
    too! But not more comfortable than we need, I can tell you,
    comrades, with all the brainwork we have to do nowadays. You
    would not rob us of our repose, would you, comrades? You would
    not have us too tired to carry out our duties? Surely none of you
    wishes to see Jones back?”

    The animals reassured him on this point immediately, and no
    more was said about the pigs sleeping in the farmhouse beds. And
    when, some days afterwards, it was announced that from now on
    the pigs would get up an hour later in the mornings than the other
    animals, no complaint was made about that either.

    By the autumn the animals were tired but happy. They had had
    a hard year, and after the sale of part of the hay and corn, the stores
    of food for the winter were none too plentiful, but the windmill
    compensated for everything. It was almost half built now. After the
    harvest there was a stretch of clear dry weather, and the animals
    toiled harder than ever, thinking it well worth while to plod to and
    fro all day with blocks of stone if by doing so they could raise the
    walls another foot. Boxer would even come out at nights and work
    for an hour or two on his own by the light of the harvest moon. In
    their spare moments the animals would walk round and round the
    half-finished mill, admiring the strength and perpendicularity of its

    53

    walls and marvelling that they should ever have been able to build
    anything so imposing. Only old Benjamin refused to grow
    enthusiastic about the windmill, though, as usual, he would utter
    nothing beyond the cryptic remark that donkeys live a long time.

    November came, with raging south-west winds. Building had
    to stop because it was now too wet to mix the cement. Finally there
    came a night when the gale was so violent that the farm buildings
    rocked on their foundations and several tiles were blown off the
    roof of the barn. The hens woke up squawking with terror because
    they had all dreamed simultaneously of hearing a gun go off in the
    distance. In the morning the animals came out of their stalls to
    find that the flagstaff had been blown down and an elm tree at the
    foot of the orchard had been plucked up like a radish. They had just
    noticed this when a cry of despair broke from every animal’s
    throat. A terrible sight had met their eyes. The windmill was in
    ruins.

    With one accord they dashed down to the spot. Napoleon, who
    seldom moved out of a walk, raced ahead of them all. Yes, there it
    lay, the fruit of all their struggles, levelled to its foundations, the
    stones they had broken and carried so laboriously scattered all
    around. Unable at first to speak, they stood gazing mournfully at
    the litter of fallen stone. Napoleon paced to and fro in silence,
    occasionally snuffing at the ground. His tail had grown rigid and
    twitched sharply from side to side, a sign in him of intense mental
    activity. Suddenly he halted as though his mind were made up.

    “Comrades,” he said quietly, “do you know who is responsible
    for this? Do you know the enemy who has come in the night and
    overthrown our windmill? SNOWBALL!” he suddenly roared in a
    voice of thunder. “Snowball has done this thing! In sheer
    malignity, thinking to set back our plans and avenge himself for his

    54

    ignominious expulsion, this traitor has crept here under cover of
    night and destroyed our work of nearly a year. Comrades, here and
    now I pronounce the death sentence upon Snowball. ‘Animal Hero,
    Second Class,’ and half a bushel of apples to any animal who brings
    him to justice. A full bushel to anyone who captures him alive!”

    The animals were shocked beyond measure to learn that even
    Snowball could be guilty of such an action. There was a cry of
    indignation, and everyone began thinking out ways of catching
    Snowball if he should ever come back. Almost immediately the
    footprints of a pig were discovered in the grass at a little distance
    from the knoll. They could only be traced for a few yards, but
    appeared to lead to a hole in the hedge. Napoleon snuffed deeply at
    them and pronounced them to be Snowball’s. He gave it as his
    opinion that Snowball had probably come from the direction of
    Foxwood Farm.

    “No more delays, comrades!” cried Napoleon when the
    footprints had been examined. “There is work to be done. This very
    morning we begin rebuilding the windmill, and we will build all
    through the winter, rain or shine. We will teach this miserable
    traitor that he cannot undo our work so easily. Remember,
    comrades, there must be no alteration in our plans: they shall be
    carried out to the day. Forward, comrades! Long live the windmill!
    Long live Animal Farm!”

    55

    56

    Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    I
    t was a bitter winter. The stormy weather was followed by sleet
    and snow, and then by a hard frost which did not break till
    well into February. The animals carried on as best they could

    with the rebuilding of the windmill, well knowing that the outside
    world was watching them and that the envious human beings
    would rejoice and triumph if the mill were not finished on time.

    Out of spite, the human beings pretended not to believe that it
    was Snowball who had destroyer the windmill: they said that it had
    fallen down because the walls were too thin. The animals knew
    that this was not the case. Still, it had been decided to build the
    walls three feet thick this time instead of eighteen inches as before,
    which meant collecting much larger quantities of stone. For a long
    time the quarry was full of snowdrifts and nothing could be done.
    Some progress was made in the dry frosty weather that followed,
    but it was cruel work, and the animals could not feel so hopeful
    about it as they had felt before. They were always cold, and usually
    hungry as well. Only Boxer and Clover never lost heart. Squealer
    made excellent speeches on the joy of service and the dignity of
    labour, but the other animals found more inspiration in Boxer’s
    strength and his never-failing cry of “I will work harder!”

    In January food fell short. The corn ration was drastically
    reduced, and it was announced that an extra potato ration would be
    issued to make up for it. Then it was discovered that the greater
    part of the potato crop had been frosted in the clamps, which had
    not been covered thickly enough. The potatoes had become soft

    CHAPTER 7

    57

    and discoloured, and only a few were edible. For days at a time the
    animals had nothing to eat but chaff and mangels. Starvation
    seemed to stare them in the face.

    It was vitally necessary to conceal this fact from the outside
    world. Emboldened by the collapse of the windmill, the human
    beings were inventing fresh lies about Animal Farm. Once again it
    was being put about that all the animals were dying of famine and
    disease, and that they were continually fighting among themselves
    and had resorted to cannibalism and infanticide. Napoleon was
    well aware of the bad results that might follow if the real facts of
    the food situation were known, and he decided to make use of Mr.
    Whymper to spread a contrary impression. Hitherto the animals
    had had little or no contact with Whymper on his weekly visits:
    now, however, a few selected animals, mostly sheep, were
    instructed to remark casually in his hearing that rations had been
    increased. In addition, Napoleon ordered the almost empty bins in
    the store-shed to be filled nearly to the brim with sand, which was
    then covered up with what remained of the grain and meal. On
    some suitable pretext Whymper was led through the store-shed
    and allowed to catch a glimpse of the bins. He was deceived, and
    continued to report to the outside world that there was no food
    shortage on Animal Farm.

    Nevertheless, towards the end of January it became obvious
    that it would be necessary to procure some more grain from
    somewhere. In these days Napoleon rarely appeared in public, but
    spent all his time in the farmhouse, which was guarded at each
    door by fierce-looking dogs. When he did emerge, it was in a
    ceremonial manner, with an escort of six dogs who closely
    surrounded him and growled if anyone came too near. Frequently
    he did not even appear on Sunday mornings, but issued his orders

    58

    through one of the other pigs, usually Squealer.

    One Sunday morning Squealer announced that the hens, who
    had just come in to lay again, must surrender their eggs. Napoleon
    had accepted, through Whymper, a contract for four hundred eggs
    a week. The price of these would pay for enough grain and meal to
    keep the farm going till summer came on and conditions were
    easier.

    When the hens heard this, they raised a terrible outcry. They
    had been warned earlier that this sacrifice might be necessary, but
    had not believed that it would really happen. They were just getting
    their clutches ready for the spring sitting, and they protested that
    to take the eggs away now was murder. For the first time since the
    expulsion of Jones, there was something resembling a rebellion.
    Led by three young Black Minorca pullets, the hens made a
    determined effort to thwart Napoleon’s wishes. Their method was
    to fly up to the rafters and there lay their eggs, which smashed to
    pieces on the floor. Napoleon acted swiftly and ruthlessly. He
    ordered the hens’ rations to be stopped, and decreed that any
    animal giving so much as a grain of corn to a hen should be
    punished by death. The dogs saw to it that these orders were
    carried out. For five days the hens held out, then they capitulated
    and went back to their nesting boxes. Nine hens had died in the
    meantime. Their bodies were buried in the orchard, and it was
    given out that they had died of coccidiosis. Whymper heard
    nothing of this affair, and the eggs were duly delivered, a grocer’s
    van driving up to the farm once a week to take them away.

    All this while no more had been seen of Snowball. He was
    rumoured to be hiding on one of the neighbouring farms, either
    Foxwood or Pinchfield. Napoleon was by this time on slightly
    better terms with the other farmers than before. It happened that

    59

    there was in the yard a pile of timber which had been stacked there
    ten years earlier when a beech spinney was cleared. It was well
    seasoned, and Whymper had advised Napoleon to sell it; both Mr.
    Pilkington and Mr. Frederick were anxious to buy it. Napoleon was
    hesitating between the two, unable to make up his mind. It was
    noticed that whenever he seemed on the point of coming to an
    agreement with Frederick, Snowball was declared to be in hiding at
    Foxwood, while, when he inclined toward Pilkington, Snowball was
    said to be at Pinchfield.

    Suddenly, early in the spring, an alarming thing was
    discovered. Snowball was secretly frequenting the farm by night!
    The animals were so disturbed that they could hardly sleep in their
    stalls. Every night, it was said, he came creeping in under cover of
    darkness and performed all kinds of mischief. He stole the corn, he
    upset the milk-pails, he broke the eggs, he trampled the seedbeds,
    he gnawed the bark off the fruit trees. Whenever anything went
    wrong it became usual to attribute it to Snowball. If a window was
    broken or a drain was blocked up, someone was certain to say that
    Snowball had come in the night and done it, and when the key of
    the store-shed was lost, the whole farm was convinced that
    Snowball had thrown it down the well. Curiously enough, they
    went on believing this even after the mislaid key was found under a
    sack of meal. The cows declared unanimously that Snowball crept
    into their stalls and milked them in their sleep. The rats, which had
    been troublesome that winter, were also said to be in league with
    Snowball.

    Napoleon decreed that there should be a full investigation into
    Snowball’s activities. With his dogs in attendance he set out and
    made a careful tour of inspection of the farm buildings, the other
    animals following at a respectful distance. At every few steps

    60

    Napoleon stopped and snuffed the ground for traces of Snowball’s
    footsteps, which, he said, he could detect by the smell. He snuffed
    in every corner, in the barn, in the cow-shed, in the henhouses, in
    the vegetable garden, and found traces of Snowball almost
    everywhere. He would put his snout to the ground, give several
    deep sniffs, ad exclaim in a terrible voice, “Snowball! He has been
    here! I can smell him distinctly!” and at the word “Snowball” all the
    dogs let out blood-curdling growls and showed their side teeth.

    The animals were thoroughly frightened. It seemed to them as
    though Snowball were some kind of invisible influence, pervading
    the air about them and menacing them with all kinds of dangers. In
    the evening Squealer called them together, and with an alarmed
    expression on his face told them that he had some serious news to
    report.

    “Comrades!” cried Squealer, making little nervous skips, “a
    most terrible thing has been discovered. Snowball has sold himself
    to Frederick of Pinchfield Farm, who is even now plotting to attack
    us and take our farm away from us! Snowball is to act as his guide
    when the attack begins. But there is worse than that. We had
    thought that Snowball’s rebellion was caused simply by his vanity
    and ambition. But we were wrong, comrades. Do you know what
    the real reason was? Snowball was in league with Jones from the
    very start! He was Jones’s secret agent all the time. It has all been
    proved by documents which he left behind him and which we have
    only just discovered. To my mind this explains a great deal,
    comrades. Did we not see for ourselves how he attempted —
    fortunately without success — to get us defeated and destroyed at
    the Battle of the Cowshed?”

    The animals were stupefied. This was a wickedness far
    outdoing Snowball’s destruction of the windmill. But it was some

    61

    minutes before they could fully take it in. They all remembered, or
    thought they remembered, how they had seen Snowball charging
    ahead of them at the Battle of the Cowshed, how he had rallied and
    encouraged them at every turn, and how he had not paused for an
    instant even when the pellets from Jones’s gun had wounded his
    back. At first it was a little difficult to see how this fitted in with his
    being on Jones’s side. Even Boxer, who seldom asked questions,
    was puzzled. He lay down, tucked his fore hoofs beneath him, shut
    his eyes, and with a hard effort managed to formulate his thoughts.

    “I do not believe that,” he said. “Snowball fought bravely at the
    Battle of the Cowshed. I saw him myself. Did we not give him
    ‘Animal Hero, first Class,’ immediately afterwards?”

    “That was our mistake, comrade. For we know now — it is all
    written down in the secret documents that we have found — that in
    reality he was trying to lure us to our doom.”

    “But he was wounded,” said Boxer. “We all saw him running
    with blood.”

    “That was part of the arrangement!” cried Squealer. “Jones’s
    shot only grazed him. I could show you this in his own writing, if
    you were able to read it. The plot was for Snowball, at the critical
    moment, to give the signal for flight and leave the field to the
    enemy. And he very nearly succeeded — I will even say, comrades,
    he WOULD have succeeded if it had not been for our heroic
    Leader, Comrade Napoleon. Do you not remember how, just at the
    moment when Jones and his men had got inside the yard, Snowball
    suddenly turned and fled, and many animals followed him? And do
    you not remember, too, that it was just at that moment, when
    panic was spreading and all seemed lost, that Comrade Napoleon
    sprang forward with a cry of ‘Death to Humanity!’ and sank his
    teeth in Jones’s leg? Surely you remember THAT, comrades?”

    62

    exclaimed Squealer, frisking from side to side.

    Now when Squealer described the scene so graphically, it
    seemed to the animals that they did remember it. At any rate, they
    remembered that at the critical moment of the battle Snowball had
    turned to flee. But Boxer was still a little uneasy.

    “I do not believe that Snowball was a traitor at the beginning,”
    he said finally. “What he has done since is different. But I believe
    that at the Battle of the Cowshed he was a good comrade.”

    “Our Leader, Comrade Napoleon,” announced Squealer,
    speaking very slowly and firmly, “has stated categorically —
    categorically, comrade — that Snowball was Jones’s agent from the
    very beginning — yes, and from long before the Rebellion was ever
    thought of.”

    “Ah, that is different!” said Boxer. “If Comrade Napoleon says
    it, it must be right.”

    “That is the true spirit, comrade!” cried Squealer, but it was
    noticed he cast a very ugly look at Boxer with his little twinkling
    eyes. He turned to go, then paused and added impressively: “I warn
    every animal on this farm to keep his eyes very wide open. For we
    have reason to think that some of Snowball’s secret agents are
    lurking among us at this moment!”

    Four days later, in the late afternoon, Napoleon ordered all the
    animals to assemble in the yard. When they were all gathered
    together, Napoleon emerged from the farmhouse, wearing both his
    medals (for he had recently awarded himself “Animal Hero, First
    Class”, and “Animal Hero, Second Class”), with his nine huge dogs
    frisking round him and uttering growls that sent shivers down all
    the animals’ spines. They all cowered silently in their places,
    seeming to know in advance that some terrible thing was about to
    happen.

    63

    Napoleon stood sternly surveying his audience; then he
    uttered a high-pitched whimper. Immediately the dogs bounded
    forward, seized four of the pigs by the ear and dragged them,
    squealing with pain and terror, to Napoleon’s feet. The pigs’ ears
    were bleeding, the dogs had tasted blood, and for a few moments
    they appeared to go quite mad. To the amazement of everybody,
    three of them flung themselves upon Boxer. Boxer saw them
    coming and put out his great hoof, caught a dog in mid-air, and
    pinned him to the ground. The dog shrieked for mercy and the
    other two fled with their tails between their legs. Boxer looked at
    Napoleon to know whether he should crush the dog to death or let
    it go. Napoleon appeared to change countenance, and sharply
    ordered Boxer to let the dog go, whereat Boxer lifted his hoof, and
    the dog slunk away, bruised and howling.

    Presently the tumult died down. The four pigs waited,
    trembling, with guilt written on every line of their countenances.
    Napoleon now called upon them to confess their crimes. They were
    the same four pigs as had protested when Napoleon abolished the
    Sunday Meetings. Without any further prompting they confessed
    that they had been secretly in touch with Snowball ever since his
    expulsion, that they had collaborated with him in destroying the
    windmill, and that they had entered into an agreement with him to
    hand over Animal Farm to Mr. Frederick. They added that Snowball
    had privately admitted to them that he had been Jones’s secret
    agent for years past. When they had finished their confession, the
    dogs promptly tore their throats out, and in a terrible voice
    Napoleon demanded whether any other animal had anything to
    confess.

    The three hens who had been the ringleaders in the attempted
    rebellion over the eggs now came forward and stated that Snowball

    64

    had appeared to them in a dream and incited them to disobey
    Napoleon’s orders. They, too, were slaughtered. Then a goose came
    forward and confessed to having secreted six ears of corn during
    the last year’s harvest and eaten them in the night. Then a sheep
    confessed to having urinated in the drinking pool — urged to do
    this, so she said, by Snowball — and two other sheep confessed to
    having murdered an old ram, an especially devoted follower of
    Napoleon, by chasing him round and round a bonfire when he was
    suffering from a cough. They were all slain on the spot. And so the
    tale of confessions and executions went on, until there was a pile of
    corpses lying before Napoleon’s feet and the air was heavy with the
    smell of blood, which had been unknown there since the expulsion
    of Jones.

    When it was all over, the remaining animals, except for the
    pigs and dogs, crept away in a body. They were shaken and
    miserable. They did not know which was more shocking — the
    treachery of the animals who had leagued themselves with
    Snowball, or the cruel retribution they had just witnessed. In the
    old days there had often been scenes of bloodshed equally terrible,
    but it seemed to all of them that it was far worse now that it was
    happening among themselves. Since Jones had left the farm, until
    today, no animal had killed another animal. Not even a rat had
    been killed. They had made their way on to the little knoll where
    the half-finished windmill stood, and with one accord they all lay
    down as though huddling together for warmth — Clover, Muriel,
    Benjamin, the cows, the sheep, and a whole flock of geese and hens
    — everyone, indeed, except the cat, who had suddenly disappeared
    just before Napoleon ordered the animals to assemble. For some
    time nobody spoke. Only Boxer remained on his feet. He fidgeted
    to and fro, swishing his long black tail against his sides and

    65

    occasionally uttering a little whinny of surprise. Finally he said:

    “I do not understand it. I would not have believed that such
    things could happen on our farm. It must be due to some fault in
    ourselves. The solution, as I see it, is to work harder. From now
    onwards I shall get up a full hour earlier in the mornings.”

    And he moved off at his lumbering trot and made for the
    quarry. Having got there, he collected two successive loads of stone
    and dragged them down to the windmill before retiring for the
    night.

    The animals huddled about Clover, not speaking. The knoll
    where they were lying gave them a wide prospect across the
    countryside. Most of Animal Farm was within their view — the
    long pasture stretching down to the main road, the hayfield, the
    spinney, the drinking pool, the ploughed fields where the young
    wheat was thick and green, and the red roofs of the farm buildings
    with the smoke curling from the chimneys. It was a clear spring
    evening. The grass and the bursting hedges were gilded by the level
    rays of the sun. Never had the farm — and with a kind of surprise
    they remembered that it was their own farm, every inch of it their
    own property — appeared to the animals so desirable a place. As
    Clover looked down the hillside her eyes filled with tears. If she
    could have spoken her thoughts, it would have been to say that this
    was not what they had aimed at when they had set themselves
    years ago to work for the overthrow of the human race. These
    scenes of terror and slaughter were not what they had looked
    forward to on that night when old Major first stirred them to
    rebellion. If she herself had had any picture of the future, it had
    been of a society of animals set free from hunger and the whip, all
    equal, each working according to his capacity, the strong protecting
    the weak, as she had protected the lost brood of ducklings with her

    66

    foreleg on the night of Major’s speech. Instead — she did not know
    why — they had come to a time when no one dared speak his mind,
    when fierce, growling dogs roamed everywhere, and when you had
    to watch your comrades torn to pieces after confessing to shocking
    crimes. There was no thought of rebellion or disobedience in her
    mind. She knew that, even as things were, they were far better off
    than they had been in the days of Jones, and that before all else it
    was needful to prevent the return of the human beings. Whatever
    happened she would remain faithful, work hard, carry out the
    orders that were given to her, and accept the leadership of
    Napoleon. But still, it was not for this that she and all the other
    animals had hoped and toiled. It was not for this that they had built
    the windmill and faced the bullets of Jones’s gun. Such were her
    thoughts, though she lacked the words to express them.

    At last, feeling this to be in some way a substitute for the
    words she was unable to find, she began to sing ‘Beasts of
    England’. The other animals sitting round her took it up, and they
    sang it three times over — very tunefully, but slowly and
    mournfully, in a way they had never sung it before.

    They had just finished singing it for the third time when
    Squealer, attended by two dogs, approached them with the air of
    having something important to say. He announced that, by a
    special decree of Comrade Napoleon, ‘Beasts of England’ had been
    abolished. From now onwards it was forbidden to sing it.

    The animals were taken aback.

    “Why?” cried Muriel.

    “It’s no longer needed, comrade,” said Squealer stiffly. “‘Beasts
    of England’ was the song of the Rebellion. But the Rebellion is now
    completed. The execution of the traitors this afternoon was the
    final act. The enemy both external and internal has been defeated.

    67

    In ‘Beasts of England’ we expressed our longing for a better society
    in days to come. But that society has now been established. Clearly
    this song has no longer any purpose.”

    Frightened though they were, some of the animals might
    possibly have protested, but at this moment the sheep set up their
    usual bleating of “Four legs good, two legs bad,” which went on for
    several minutes and put an end to the discussion.

    So ‘Beasts of England’ was heard no more. In its place
    Minimus, the poet, had composed another song which began:

    and this was sung every Sunday morning after the hoisting of the
    flag. But somehow neither the words nor the tune ever seemed to
    the animals to come up to ‘Beasts of England’.

    Animal Farm, Animal Farm,
    Never through me shalt thou come to harm!

    68

    Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    A
    few days later, when the terror caused by the executions
    had died down, some of the animals remembered — or
    thought they remembered — that the Sixth Commandment

    decreed “No animal shall kill any other animal.” And though no
    one cared to mention it in the hearing of the pigs or the dogs, it was
    felt that the killings which had taken place did not square with this.
    Clover asked Benjamin to read her the Sixth Commandment, and
    when Benjamin, as usual, said that he refused to meddle in such
    matters, she fetched Muriel. Muriel read the Commandment for
    her. It ran: “No animal shall kill any other animal WITHOUT
    CAUSE.” Somehow or other, the last two words had slipped out of
    the animals’ memory. But they saw now that the Commandment
    had not been violated; for clearly there was good reason for killing
    the traitors who had leagued themselves with Snowball.

    Throughout the year the animals worked even harder than
    they had worked in the previous year. To rebuild the windmill, with
    walls twice as thick as before, and to finish it by the appointed date,
    together with the regular work of the farm, was a tremendous
    labour. There were times when it seemed to the animals that they
    worked longer hours and fed no better than they had done in
    Jones’s day. On Sunday mornings Squealer, holding down a long
    strip of paper with his trotter, would read out to them lists of
    figures proving that the production of every class of foodstuff had
    increased by two hundred per cent, three hundred per cent, or five
    hundred per cent, as the case might be. The animals saw no reason

    CHAPTER 8

    69

    to disbelieve him, especially as they could no longer remember
    very clearly what conditions had been like before the Rebellion. All
    the same, there were days when they felt that they would sooner
    have had less figures and more food.

    All orders were now issued through Squealer or one of the
    other pigs. Napoleon himself was not seen in public as often as
    once in a fortnight. When he did appear, he was attended not only
    by his retinue of dogs but by a black cockerel who marched in front
    of him and acted as a kind of trumpeter, letting out a loud “cock-a-
    doodle-doo” before Napoleon spoke. Even in the farmhouse, it was
    said, Napoleon inhabited separate apartments from the others. He
    took his meals alone, with two dogs to wait upon him, and always
    ate from the Crown Derby dinner service which had been in the
    glass cupboard in the drawing-room. It was also announced that
    the gun would be fired every year on Napoleon’s birthday, as well
    as on the other two anniversaries.

    Napoleon was now never spoken of simply as “Napoleon.” He
    was always referred to in formal style as “our Leader, Comrade
    Napoleon,” and this pigs liked to invent for him such titles as
    Father of All Animals, Terror of Mankind, Protector of the Sheep-
    fold, Ducklings’ Friend, and the like. In his speeches, Squealer
    would talk with the tears rolling down his cheeks of Napoleon’s
    wisdom the goodness of his heart, and the deep love he bore to all
    animals everywhere, even and especially the unhappy animals who
    still lived in ignorance and slavery on other farms. It had become
    usual to give Napoleon the credit for every successful achievement
    and every stroke of good fortune. You would often hear one hen
    remark to another, “Under the guidance of our Leader, Comrade
    Napoleon, I have laid five eggs in six days”; or two cows, enjoying a
    drink at the pool, would exclaim, “Thanks to the leadership of

    70

    Comrade Napoleon, how excellent this water tastes!” The general
    feeling on the farm was well expressed in a poem entitled Comrade
    Napoleon, which was composed by Minimus and which ran as
    follows:

    Napoleon approved of this poem and caused it to be inscribed on
    the wall of the big barn, at the opposite end from the Seven

    Friend of fatherless!
    Fountain of happiness!
    Lord of the swill-bucket! Oh, how my soul is

    on
    Fire when I gaze at thy
    Calm and commanding eye,
    Like the sun in the sky,
    Comrade Napoleon!

    Thou are the giver of
    All that thy creatures love,
    Full belly twice a day, clean straw to roll upon;
    Every beast great or small
    Sleeps at peace in his stall,
    Thou watchest over all,
    Comrade Napoleon!

    Had I a sucking-pig,
    Ere he had grown as big
    Even as a pint bottle or as a rolling-pin,
    He should have learned to be
    Faithful and true to thee,
    Yes, his first squeak should be
    “Comrade Napoleon!”

    71

    Commandments. It was surmounted by a portrait of Napoleon, in
    profile, executed by Squealer in white paint.

    Meanwhile, through the agency of Whymper, Napoleon was
    engaged in complicated negotiations with Frederick and Pilkington.
    The pile of timber was still unsold. Of the two, Frederick was the
    more anxious to get hold of it, but he would not offer a reasonable
    price. At the same time there were renewed rumours that Frederick
    and his men were plotting to attack Animal Farm and to destroy
    the windmill, the building of which had aroused furious jealousy in
    him. Snowball was known to be still skulking on Pinchfield Farm.
    In the middle of the summer the animals were alarmed to hear
    that three hens had come forward and confessed that, inspired by
    Snowball, they had entered into a plot to murder Napoleon. They
    were executed immediately, and fresh precautions for Napoleon’s
    safety were taken. Four dogs guarded his bed at night, one at each
    corner, and a young pig named Pinkeye was given the task of
    tasting all his food before he ate it, lest it should be poisoned.

    At about the same time it was given out that Napoleon had
    arranged to sell the pile of timber to Mr. Pilkington; he was also
    going to enter into a regular agreement for the exchange of certain
    products between Animal Farm and Foxwood. The relations
    between Napoleon and Pilkington, though they were only
    conducted through Whymper, were now almost friendly. The
    animals distrusted Pilkington, as a human being, but greatly
    preferred him to Frederick, whom they both feared and hated. As
    the summer wore on, and the windmill neared completion, the
    rumours of an impending treacherous attack grew stronger and
    stronger. Frederick, it was said, intended to bring against them
    twenty men all armed with guns, and he had already bribed the
    magistrates and police, so that if he could once get hold of the title-

    72

    deeds of Animal Farm they would ask no questions. Moreover,
    terrible stories were leaking out from Pinchfield about the cruelties
    that Frederick practised upon his animals. He had flogged an old
    horse to death, he starved his cows, he had killed a dog by throwing
    it into the furnace, he amused himself in the evenings by making
    cocks fight with splinters of razor-blade tied to their spurs. The
    animals’ blood boiled with rage when they heard of these things
    beingdone to their comrades, and sometimes they clamoured to be
    allowed to go out in a body and attack Pinchfield Farm, drive out
    the humans, and set the animals free. But Squealer counselled
    them to avoid rash actions and trust in Comrade Napoleon’s
    strategy.

    Nevertheless, feeling against Frederick continued to run high.
    One Sunday morning Napoleon appeared in the barn and explained
    that he had never at any time contemplated selling the pile of
    timber to Frederick; he considered it beneath his dignity, he said,
    to have dealings with scoundrels of that description. The pigeons
    who were still sent out to spread tidings of the Rebellion were
    forbidden to set foot anywhere on Foxwood, and were also ordered
    to drop their former slogan of “Death to Humanity” in favour of
    “Death to Frederick.” In the late summer yet another of Snowball’s
    machinations was laid bare. The wheat crop was full of weeds, and
    it was discovered that on one of his nocturnal visits Snowball had
    mixed weed seeds with the seed corn. A gander who had been privy
    to the plot had confessed his guilt to Squealer and immediately
    committed suicide by swallowing deadly nightshade berries. The
    animals now also learned that Snowball had never — as many of
    them had believed hitherto — received the order of “Animal Hero,
    First Class.” This was merely a legend which had been spread some
    time after the Battle of the Cowshed by Snowball himself. So far

    73

    from being decorated, he had been censured for showing cowardice
    in the battle. Once again some of the animals heard this with a
    certain bewilderment, but Squealer was soon able to convince them
    that their memories had been at fault.

    In the autumn, by a tremendous, exhausting effort — for the
    harvest had to be gathered at almost the same time — the windmill
    was finished. The machinery had still to be installed, and Whymper
    was negotiating the purchase of it, but the structure was
    completed. In the teeth of every difficulty, in spite of inexperience,
    of primitive implements, of bad luck and of Snowball’s treachery,
    the work had been finished punctually to the very day! Tired out
    but proud, the animals walked round and round their masterpiece,
    which appeared even more beautiful in their eyes than when it had
    been built the first time. Moreover, the walls were twice as thick as
    before. Nothing short of explosives would lay them low this time!
    And when they thought of how they had laboured, what
    discouragements they had overcome, and the enormous difference
    that would be made in their lives when the sails were turning and
    the dynamos running — when they thought of all this, their
    tiredness forsook them and they gambolled round and round the
    windmill, uttering cries of triumph. Napoleon himself, attended by
    his dogs and his cockerel, came down to inspect the completed
    work; he personally congratulated the animals on their
    achievement, and announced that the mill would be named
    Napoleon Mill.

    Two days later the animals were called together for a special
    meeting in the barn. They were struck dumb with surprise when
    Napoleon announced that he had sold the pile of timber to
    Frederick. Tomorrow Frederick’s wagons would arrive and begin
    carting it away. Throughout the whole period of his seeming

    74

    friendship with Pilkington, Napoleon had really been in secret
    agreement with Frederick.

    All relations with Foxwood had been broken off; insulting
    messages had been sent to Pilkington. The pigeons had been told to
    avoid Pinchfield Farm and to alter their slogan from “Death to
    Frederick” to “Death to Pilkington.” At the same time Napoleon
    assured the animals that the stories of an impending attack on
    Animal Farm were completely untrue, and that the tales about
    Frederick’s cruelty to his own animals had been greatly
    exaggerated. All these rumours had probably originated with
    Snowball and his agents. It now appeared that Snowball was not,
    after all, hiding on Pinchfield Farm, and in fact had never been
    there in his life: he was living — in considerable luxury, so it was
    said — at Foxwood, and had in reality been a pensioner of
    Pilkington for years past.

    The pigs were in ecstasies over Napoleon’s cunning. By
    seeming to be friendly with Pilkington he had forced Frederick to
    raise his price by twelve pounds. But the superior quality of
    Napoleon’s mind, said Squealer, was shown in the fact that he
    trusted nobody, not even Frederick. Frederick had wanted to pay
    for the timber with something called a cheque, which, it seemed,
    was a piece of paper with a promise to pay written upon it. But
    Napoleon was too clever for him. He had demanded payment in
    real five-pound notes, which were to be handed over before the
    timber was removed. Already Frederick had paid up; and the sum
    he had paid was just enough to buy the machinery for the
    windmill.

    Meanwhile the timber was being carted away at high speed.
    When it was all gone, another special meeting was held in the barn
    for the animals to inspect Frederick’s bank-notes. Smiling

    75

    beatifically, and wearing both his decorations, Napoleon reposed
    on a bed of straw on the platform, with the money at his side,
    neatly piled on a china dish from the farmhouse kitchen. The
    animals filed slowly past, and each gazed his fill. And Boxer put out
    his nose to sniff at the bank-notes, and the flimsy white things
    stirred and rustled in his breath.

    Three days later there was a terrible hullabaloo. Whymper, his
    face deadly pale, came racing up the path on his bicycle, flung it
    down in the yard and rushed straight into the farmhouse. The next
    moment a choking roar of rage sounded from Napoleon’s
    apartments. The news of what had happened sped round the farm
    like wildfire. The banknotes were forgeries! Frederick had got the
    timber for nothing!

    Napoleon called the animals together immediately and in a
    terrible voice pronounced the death sentence upon Frederick.
    When captured, he said, Frederick should be boiled alive. At the
    same time he warned them that after this treacherous deed the
    worst was to be expected. Frederick and his men might make their
    long-expected attack at any moment. Sentinels were placed at all
    the approaches to the farm. In addition, four pigeons were sent to
    Foxwood with a conciliatory message, which it was hoped might re-
    establish good relations with Pilkington.

    The very next morning the attack came. The animals were at
    breakfast when the look-outs came racing in with the news that
    Frederick and his followers had already come through the five-
    barred gate. Boldly enough the animals sallied forth to meet them,
    but this time they did not have the easy victory that they had had in
    the Battle of the Cowshed. There were fifteen men, with half a
    dozen guns between them, and they opened fire as soon as they got
    within fifty yards. The animals could not face the terrible

    76

    explosions and the stinging pellets, and in spite of the efforts of
    Napoleon and Boxer to rally them, they were soon driven back. A
    number of them were already wounded. They took refuge in the
    farm buildings and peeped cautiously out from chinks and knot-
    holes. The whole of the big pasture, including the windmill, was in
    the hands of the enemy. For the moment even Napoleon seemed at
    a loss. He paced up and down without a word, his tail rigid and
    twitching. Wistful glances were sent in the direction of Foxwood. If
    Pilkington and his men would help them, the day might yet be
    won. But at this moment the four pigeons, who had been sent out
    on the day before, returned, one of them bearing a scrap of paper
    from Pilkington. On it was pencilled the words: “Serves you right.”

    Meanwhile Frederick and his men had halted about the
    windmill. The animals watched them, and a murmur of dismay
    went round. Two of the men had produced a crowbar and a sledge
    hammer. They were going to knock the windmill down.

    “Impossible!” cried Napoleon. “We have built the walls far too
    thick for that. They could not knock it down in a week. Courage,
    comrades!”

    But Benjamin was watching the movements of the men
    intently. The two with the hammer and the crowbar were drilling a
    hole near the base of the windmill. Slowly, and with an air almost
    of amusement, Benjamin nodded his long muzzle.

    “I thought so,” he said. “Do you not see what they are doing?
    In another moment they are going to pack blasting powder into
    that hole.”

    Terrified, the animals waited. It was impossible now to
    venture out of the shelter of the buildings. After a few minutes the
    men were seen to be running in all directions. Then there was a
    deafening roar. The pigeons swirled into the air, and all the

    77

    animals, except Napoleon, flung themselves flat on their bellies
    and hid their faces. When they got up again, a huge cloud of black
    smoke was hanging where the windmill had been. Slowly the
    breeze drifted it away. The windmill had ceased to exist!

    At this sight the animals’ courage returned to them. The fear
    and despair they had felt a moment earlier were drowned in their
    rage against this vile, contemptible act. A mighty cry for vengeance
    went up, and without waiting for further orders they charged forth
    in a body and made straight for the enemy. This time they did not
    heed the cruel pellets that swept over them like hail. It was a
    savage, bitter battle. The men fired again and again, and, when the
    animals got to close quarters, lashed out with their sticks and their
    heavy boots. A cow, three sheep, and two geese were killed, and
    nearly everyone was wounded. Even Napoleon, who was directing
    operations from the rear, had the tip of his tail chipped by a pellet.
    But the men did not go unscathed either. Three of them had their
    heads broken by blows from Boxer’s hoofs; another was gored in
    the belly by a cow’s horn; another had his trousers nearly torn off
    by Jessie and Bluebell. And when the nine dogs of Napoleon’s own
    bodyguard, whom he had instructed to make a detour under cover
    of the hedge, suddenly appeared on the men’s flank, baying
    ferociously, panic overtook them. They saw that they were in
    danger of being surrounded. Frederick shouted to his men to get
    out while the going was good, and the next moment the cowardly
    enemy was running for dear life. The animals chased them right
    down to the bottom of the field, and got in some last kicks at them
    as they forced their way through the thorn hedge.

    They had won, but they were weary and bleeding. Slowly they
    began to limp back towards the farm. The sight of their dead
    comrades stretched upon the grass moved some of them to tears.

    78

    And for a little while they halted in sorrowful silence at the place
    where the windmill had once stood. Yes, it was gone; almost the
    last trace of their labour was gone! Even the foundations were
    partially destroyed. And in rebuilding it they could not this time, as
    before, make use of the fallen stones. This time the stones had
    vanished too. The force of the explosion had flung them to
    distances of hundreds of yards. It was as though the windmill had
    never been.

    As they approached the farm Squealer, who had unaccountably
    been absent during the fighting, came skipping towards them,
    whisking his tail and beaming with satisfaction. And the animals
    heard, from the direction of the farm buildings, the solemn
    booming of a gun.

    “What is that gun firing for?” said Boxer.

    “To celebrate our victory!” cried Squealer.

    “What victory?” said Boxer. His knees were bleeding, he had
    lost a shoe and split his hoof, and a dozen pellets had lodged
    themselves in his hind leg.

    “What victory, comrade? Have we not driven the enemy off
    our soil — the sacred soil of Animal Farm?”

    “But they have destroyed the windmill. And we had worked on
    it for two years!”

    “What matter? We will build another windmill. We will build
    six windmills if we feel like it. You do not appreciate, comrade, the
    mighty thing that we have done. The enemy was in occupation of
    this very ground that we stand upon. And now — thanks to the
    leadership of Comrade Napoleon — we have won every inch of it
    back again!”

    “Then we have won back what we had before,” said Boxer.

    79

    “That is our victory,” said Squealer.

    They limped into the yard. The pellets under the skin of
    Boxer’s leg smarted painfully. He saw ahead of him the heavy
    labour of rebuilding the windmill from the foundations, and
    already in imagination he braced himself for the task. But for the
    first time it occurred to him that he was eleven years old and that
    perhaps his great muscles were not quite what they had once been.

    But when the animals saw the green flag flying, and heard the
    gun firing again — seven times it was fired in all — and heard the
    speech that Napoleon made, congratulating them on their conduct,
    it did seem to them after all that they had won a great victory. The
    animals slain in the battle were given a solemn funeral. Boxer and
    Clover pulled the wagon which served as a hearse, and Napoleon
    himself walked at the head of the procession. Two whole days were
    given over to celebrations. There were songs, speeches, and more
    firing of the gun, and a special gift of an apple was bestowed on
    every animal, with two ounces of corn for each bird and three
    biscuits for each dog. It was announced that the battle would be
    called the Battle of the Windmill, and that Napoleon had created a
    new decoration, the Order of the Green Banner, which he had
    conferred upon himself. In the general rejoicings the unfortunate
    affair of the banknotes was forgotten.

    It was a few days later than this that the pigs came upon a case
    of whisky in the cellars of the farmhouse. It had been overlooked at
    the time when the house was first occupied. That night there came
    from the farmhouse the sound of loud singing, in which, to
    everyone’s surprise, the strains of ‘Beasts of England’ were mixed
    up. At about half past nine Napoleon, wearing an old bowler hat of
    Mr. Jones’s, was distinctly seen to emerge from the back door,
    gallop rapidly round the yard, and disappear indoors again. But in

    80

    the morning a deep silence hung over the farmhouse. Not a pig
    appeared to be stirring. It was nearly nine o’clock when Squealer
    made his appearance, walking slowly and dejectedly, his eyes dull,
    his tail hanging limply behind him, and with every appearance of
    being seriously ill. He called the animals together and told them
    that he had a terrible piece of news to impart. Comrade Napoleon
    was dying!

    A cry of lamentation went up. Straw was laid down outside the
    doors of the farmhouse, and the animals walked on tiptoe. With
    tears in their eyes they asked one another what they should do if
    their Leader were taken away from them. A rumour went round
    that Snowball had after all contrived to introduce poison into
    Napoleon’s food. At eleven o’clock Squealer came out to make
    another announcement. As his last act upon earth, Comrade
    Napoleon had pronounced a solemn decree: the drinking of alcohol
    was to be punished by death.

    By the evening, however, Napoleon appeared to be somewhat
    better, and the following morning Squealer was able to tell them
    that he was well on the way to recovery. By the evening of that day
    Napoleon was back at work, and on the next day it was learned that
    he had instructed Whymper to purchase in Willingdon some
    booklets on brewing and distilling. A week later Napoleon gave
    orders that the small paddock beyond the orchard, which it had
    previously been intended to set aside as a grazing-ground for
    animals who were past work, was to be ploughed up. It was given
    out that the pasture was exhausted and needed re-seeding; but it
    soon became known that Napoleon intended to sow it with barley.

    About this time there occurred a strange incident which hardly
    anyone was able to understand. One night at about twelve o’clock
    there was a loud crash in the yard, and the animals rushed out of

    81

    their stalls. It was a moonlit night. At the foot of the end wall of the
    big barn, where the Seven Commandments were written, there lay
    a ladder broken in two pieces. Squealer, temporarily stunned, was
    sprawling beside it, and near at hand there lay a lantern, a paint-
    brush, and an overturned pot of white paint. The dogs immediately
    made a ring round Squealer, and escorted him back to the
    farmhouse as soon as he was able to walk. None of the animals
    could form any idea as to what this meant, except old Benjamin,
    who nodded his muzzle with a knowing air, and seemed to
    understand, but would say nothing.

    But a few days later Muriel, reading over the Seven
    Commandments to herself, noticed that there was yet another of
    them which the animals had remembered wrong. They had thought
    the Fifth Commandment was “No animal shall drink alcohol,” but
    there were two words that they had forgotten. Actually the
    Commandment read: “No animal shall drink alcohol TO EXCESS.”

    82

    Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    B
    oxer’s split hoof was a long time in healing. They had
    started the rebuilding of the windmill the day after the
    victory celebrations were ended. Boxer refused to take even

    a day off work, and made it a point of honour not to let it be seen
    that he was in pain. In the evenings he would admit privately to
    Clover that the hoof troubled him a great deal. Clover treated the
    hoof with poultices of herbs which she prepared by chewing them,
    and both she and Benjamin urged Boxer to work less hard. “A
    horse’s lungs do not last for ever,” she said to him. But Boxer
    would not listen. He had, he said, only one real ambition left — to
    see the windmill well under way before he reached the age for
    retirement.

    At the beginning, when the laws of Animal Farm were first
    formulated, the retiring age had been fixed for horses and pigs at
    twelve, for cows at fourteen, for dogs at nine, for sheep at seven,
    and for hens and geese at five. Liberal old-age pensions had been
    agreed upon. As yet no animal had actually retired on pension, but
    of late the subject had been discussed more and more. Now that
    the small field beyond the orchard had been set aside for barley, it
    was rumoured that a corner of the large pasture was to be fenced
    off and turned into a grazing-ground for superannuated animals.
    For a horse, it was said, the pension would be five pounds of corn a
    day and, in winter, fifteen pounds of hay, with a carrot or possibly
    an apple on public holidays. Boxer’s twelfth birthday was due in the
    late summer of the following year.

    CHAPTER 9

    83

    Meanwhile life was hard. The winter was as cold as the last
    one had been, and food was even shorter. Once again all rations
    were reduced, except those of the pigs and the dogs. A too rigid
    equality in rations, Squealer explained, would have been contrary
    to the principles of Animalism. In any case he had no difficulty in
    proving to the other animals that they were NOT in reality short of
    food, whatever the appearances might be. For the time being,
    certainly, it had been found necessary to make a readjustment of
    rations (Squealer always spoke of it as a “readjustment,” never as a
    “reduction”), but in comparison with the days of Jones, the
    improvement was enormous. Reading out the figures in a shrill,
    rapid voice, he proved to them in detail that they had more oats,
    more hay, more turnips than they had had in Jones’s day, that they
    worked shorter hours, that their drinking water was of better
    quality, that they lived longer, that a larger proportion of their
    young ones survived infancy, and that they had more straw in their
    stalls and suffered less from fleas. The animals believed every word
    of it. Truth to tell, Jones and all he stood for had almost faded out
    of their memories. They knew that life nowadays was harsh and
    bare, that they were often hungry and often cold, and that they
    were usually working when they were not asleep. But doubtless it
    had been worse in the old days. They were glad to believe so.
    Besides, in those days they had been slaves and now they were free,
    and that made all the difference, as Squealer did not fail to point
    out.

    There were many more mouths to feed now. In the autumn
    the four sows had all littered about simultaneously, producing
    thirty-one young pigs between them. The young pigs were piebald,
    and as Napoleon was the only boar on the farm, it was possible to
    guess at their parentage. It was announced that later, when bricks

    84

    and timber had been purchased, a schoolroom would be built in the
    farmhouse garden. For the time being, the young pigs were given
    their instruction by Napoleon himself in the farmhouse kitchen.
    They took their exercise in the garden, and were discouraged from
    playing with the other young animals. About this time, too, it was
    laid down as a rule that when a pig and any other animal met on
    the path, the other animal must stand aside: and also that all pigs,
    of whatever degree, were to have the privilege of wearing green
    ribbons on their tails on Sundays.

    The farm had had a fairly successful year, but was still short of
    money. There were the bricks, sand, and lime for the schoolroom
    to be purchased, and it would also be necessary to begin saving up
    again for the machinery for the windmill. Then there were lamp oil
    and candles for the house, sugar for Napoleon’s own table (he
    forbade this to the other pigs, on the ground that it made them fat),
    and all the usual replacements such as tools, nails, string, coal,
    wire, scrap-iron, and dog biscuits. A stump of hay and part of the
    potato crop were sold off, and the contract for eggs was increased
    to six hundred a week, so that that year the hens barely hatched
    enough chicks to keep their numbers at the same level. Rations,
    reduced in December, were reduced again in February, and
    lanterns in the stalls were forbidden to save oil. But the pigs
    seemed comfortable enough, and in fact were putting on weight if
    anything. One afternoon in late February a warm, rich, appetising
    scent, such as the animals had never smelt before, wafted itself
    across the yard from the little brew-house, which had been disused
    in Jones’s time, and which stood beyond the kitchen. Someone said
    it was the smell of cooking barley. The animals sniffed the air
    hungrily and wondered whether a warm mash was being prepared
    for their supper. But no warm mash appeared, and on the following

    85

    Sunday it was announced that from now onwards all barley would
    be reserved for the pigs. The field beyond the orchard had already
    been sown with barley. And the news soon leaked out that every
    pig was now receiving a ration of a pint of beer daily, with half a
    gallon for Napoleon himself, which was always served to him in the
    Crown Derby soup tureen.

    But if there were hardships to be borne, they were partly offset
    by the fact that life nowadays had a greater dignity than it had had
    before. There were more songs, more speeches, more processions.
    Napoleon had commanded that once a week there should be held
    something called a Spontaneous Demonstration, the object of
    which was to celebrate the struggles and triumphs of Animal Farm.
    At the appointed time the animals would leave their work and
    march round the precincts of the farm in military formation, with
    the pigs leading, then the horses, then the cows, then the sheep,
    and then the poultry. The dogs flanked the procession and at the
    head of all marched Napoleon’s black cockerel. Boxer and Clover
    always carried between them a green banner marked with the hoof
    and the horn and the caption, “Long live Comrade Napoleon!”
    Afterwards there were recitations of poems composed in
    Napoleon’s honour, and a speech by Squealer giving particulars of
    the latest increases in the production of foodstuffs, and on
    occasion a shot was fired from the gun. The sheep were the
    greatest devotees of the Spontaneous Demonstration, and if
    anyone complained (as a few animals sometimes did, when no pigs
    or dogs were near) that they wasted time and meant a lot of
    standing about in the cold, the sheep were sure to silence him with
    a tremendous bleating of “Four legs good, two legs bad!” But by
    and large the animals enjoyed these celebrations. They found it
    comforting to be reminded that, after all, they were truly their own

    86

    masters and that the work they did was for their own benefit. So
    that, what with the songs, the processions, Squealer’s lists of
    figures, the thunder of the gun, the crowing of the cockerel, and the
    fluttering of the flag, they were able to forget that their bellies were
    empty, at least part of the time.

    In April, Animal Farm was proclaimed a Republic, and it
    became necessary to elect a President. There was only one
    candidate, Napoleon, who was elected unanimously. On the same
    day it was given out that fresh documents had been discovered
    which revealed further details about Snowball’s complicity with
    Jones. It now appeared that Snowball had not, as the animals had
    previously imagined, merely attempted to lose the Battle of the
    Cowshed by means of a stratagem, but had been openly fighting on
    Jones’s side. In fact, it was he who had actually been the leader of
    the human forces, and had charged into battle with the words
    “Long live Humanity!” on his lips. The wounds on Snowball’s back,
    which a few of the animals still remembered to have seen, had
    been inflicted by Napoleon’s teeth.

    In the middle of the summer Moses the raven suddenly
    reappeared on the farm, after an absence of several years. He was
    quite unchanged, still did no work, and talked in the same strain as
    ever about Sugarcandy Mountain. He would perch on a stump, flap
    his black wings, and talk by the hour to anyone who would listen.
    “Up there, comrades,” he would say solemnly, pointing to the sky
    with his large beak —“up there, just on the other side of that dark
    cloud that you can see — there it lies, Sugarcandy Mountain, that
    happy country where we poor animals shall rest for ever from our
    labours!” He even claimed to have been there on one of his higher
    flights, and to have seen the everlasting fields of clover and the
    linseed cake and lump sugar growing on the hedges. Many of the

    87

    animals believed him. Their lives now, they reasoned, were hungry
    and laborious; was it not right and just that a better world should
    exist somewhere else? A thing that was difficult to determine was
    the attitude of the pigs towards Moses. They all declared
    contemptuously that his stories about Sugarcandy Mountain were
    lies, and yet they allowed him to remain on the farm, not working,
    with an allowance of a gill of beer a day.

    After his hoof had healed up, Boxer worked harder than ever.
    Indeed, all the animals worked like slaves that year. Apart from the
    regular work of the farm, and the rebuilding of the windmill, there
    was the schoolhouse for the young pigs, which was started in
    March. Sometimes the long hours on insufficient food were hard to
    bear, but Boxer never faltered. In nothing that he said or did was
    there any sign that his strength was not what it had been. It was
    only his appearance that was a little altered; his hide was less shiny
    than it had used to be, and his great haunches seemed to have
    shrunken. The others said, “Boxer will pick up when the spring
    grass comes on”; but the spring came and Boxer grew no fatter.
    Sometimes on the slope leading to the top of the quarry, when he
    braced his muscles against the weight of some vast boulder, it
    seemed that nothing kept him on his feet except the will to
    continue. At such times his lips were seen to form the words, “I
    will work harder”; he had no voice left. Once again Clover and
    Benjamin warned him to take care of his health, but Boxer paid no
    attention. His twelfth birthday was approaching. He did not care
    what happened so long as a good store of stone was accumulated
    before he went on pension.

    Late one evening in the summer, a sudden rumour ran round
    the farm that something had happened to Boxer. He had gone out
    alone to drag a load of stone down to the windmill. And sure

    88

    enough, the rumour was true. A few minutes later two pigeons
    came racing in with the news; “Boxer has fallen! He is lying on his
    side and can’t get up!”

    About half the animals on the farm rushed out to the knoll
    where the windmill stood. There lay Boxer, between the shafts of
    the cart, his neck stretched out, unable even to raise his head. His
    eyes were glazed, his sides matted with sweat. A thin stream of
    blood had trickled out of his mouth. Clover dropped to her knees at
    his side.

    “Boxer!” she cried, “how are you?”

    “It is my lung,” said Boxer in a weak voice. “It does not matter.
    I think you will be able to finish the windmill without me. There is
    a pretty good store of stone accumulated. I had only another month
    to go in any case. To tell you the truth, I had been looking forward
    to my retirement. And perhaps, as Benjamin is growing old too,
    they will let him retire at the same time and be a companion to
    me.”

    “We must get help at once,” said Clover. “Run, somebody, and
    tell Squealer what has happened.”

    All the other animals immediately raced back to the
    farmhouse to give Squealer the news. Only Clover remained, and
    Benjamin who lay down at Boxer’s side, and, without speaking,
    kept the flies off him with his long tail. After about a quarter of an
    hour Squealer appeared, full of sympathy and concern. He said that
    Comrade Napoleon had learned with the very deepest distress of
    this misfortune to one of the most loyal workers on the farm, and
    was already making arrangements to send Boxer to be treated in
    the hospital at Willingdon. The animals felt a little uneasy at this.
    Except for Mollie and Snowball, no other animal had ever left the
    farm, and they did not like to think of their sick comrade in the

    89

    hands of human beings. However, Squealer easily convinced them
    that the veterinary surgeon in Willingdon could treat Boxer’s case
    more satisfactorily than could be done on the farm. And about half
    an hour later, when Boxer had somewhat recovered, he was with
    difficulty got on to his feet, and managed to limp back to his stall,
    where Clover and Benjamin had prepared a good bed of straw for
    him.

    For the next two days Boxer remained in his stall. The pigs had
    sent out a large bottle of pink medicine which they had found in
    the medicine chest in the bathroom, and Clover administered it to
    Boxer twice a day after meals. In the evenings she lay in his stall
    and talked to him, while Benjamin kept the flies off him. Boxer
    professed not to be sorry for what had happened. If he made a good
    recovery, he might expect to live another three years, and he looked
    forward to the peaceful days that he would spend in the corner of
    the big pasture. It would be the first time that he had had leisure to
    study and improve his mind. He intended, he said, to devote the
    rest of his life to learning the remaining twenty-two letters of the
    alphabet.

    However, Benjamin and Clover could only be with Boxer after
    working hours, and it was in the middle of the day when the van
    came to take him away. The animals were all at work weeding
    turnips under the supervision of a pig, when they were astonished
    to see Benjamin come galloping from the direction of the farm
    buildings, braying at the top of his voice. It was the first time that
    they had ever seen Benjamin excited — indeed, it was the first time
    that anyone had ever seen him gallop. “Quick, quick!” he shouted.
    “Come at once! They’re taking Boxer away!” Without waiting for
    orders from the pig, the animals broke off work and raced back to
    the farm buildings. Sure enough, there in the yard was a large

    90

    closed van, drawn by two horses, with lettering on its side and a
    sly-looking man in a low-crowned bowler hat sitting on the driver’s
    seat. And Boxer’s stall was empty.

    The animals crowded round the van. “Good-bye, Boxer!” they
    chorused, “good-bye!”

    “Fools! Fools!” shouted Benjamin, prancing round them and
    stamping the earth with his small hoofs. “Fools! Do you not see
    what is written on the side of that van?”

    That gave the animals pause, and there was a hush. Muriel
    began to spell out the words. But Benjamin pushed her aside and in
    the midst of a deadly silence he read:

    “‘Alfred Simmonds, Horse Slaughterer and Glue Boiler,
    Willingdon. Dealer in Hides and Bone-Meal. Kennels Supplied.’ Do
    you not understand what that means? They are taking Boxer to the
    knacker’s!”

    A cry of horror burst from all the animals. At this moment the
    man on the box whipped up his horses and the van moved out of
    the yard at a smart trot. All the animals followed, crying out at the
    tops of their voices. Clover forced her way to the front. The van
    began to gather speed. Clover tried to stir her stout limbs to a
    gallop, and achieved a canter. “Boxer!” she cried. “Boxer! Boxer!
    Boxer!” And just at this moment, as though he had heard the
    uproar outside, Boxer’s face, with the white stripe down his nose,
    appeared at the small window at the back of the van.

    “Boxer!” cried Clover in a terrible voice. “Boxer! Get out! Get
    out quickly! They’re taking you to your death!”

    All the animals took up the cry of “Get out, Boxer, get out!”
    But the van was already gathering speed and drawing away from
    them. It was uncertain whether Boxer had understood what Clover
    had said. But a moment later his face disappeared from the window

    91

    and there was the sound of a tremendous drumming of hoofs
    inside the van. He was trying to kick his way out. The time had
    been when a few kicks from Boxer’s hoofs would have smashed the
    van to matchwood. But alas! his strength had left him; and in a few
    moments the sound of drumming hoofs grew fainter and died
    away. In desperation the animals began appealing to the two
    horses which drew the van to stop. “Comrades, comrades!” they
    shouted. “Don’t take your own brother to his death! “But the stupid
    brutes, too ignorant to realise what was happening, merely set back
    their ears and quickened their pace. Boxer’s face did not reappear
    at the window. Too late, someone thought of racing ahead and
    shutting the five-barred gate; but in another moment the van was
    through it and rapidly disappearing down the road. Boxer was
    never seen again.

    Three days later it was announced that he had died in the
    hospital at Willingdon, in spite of receiving every attention a horse
    could have. Squealer came to announce the news to the others. He
    had, he said, been present during Boxer’s last hours.

    “It was the most affecting sight I have ever seen!” said
    Squealer, lifting his trotter and wiping away a tear. “I was at his
    bedside at the very last. And at the end, almost too weak to speak,
    he whispered in my ear that his sole sorrow was to have passed on
    before the windmill was finished. ‘Forward, comrades!’ he
    whispered. ‘Forward in the name of the Rebellion. Long live
    Animal Farm! Long live Comrade Napoleon! Napoleon is always
    right.’ Those were his very last words, comrades.”

    Here Squealer’s demeanour suddenly changed. He fell silent
    for a moment, and his little eyes darted suspicious glances from
    side to side before he proceeded.

    It had come to his knowledge, he said, that a foolish and

    92

    wicked rumour had been circulated at the time of Boxer’s removal.
    Some of the animals had noticed that the van which took Boxer
    away was marked “Horse Slaughterer,” and had actually jumped to
    the conclusion that Boxer was being sent to the knacker’s. It was
    almost unbelievable, said Squealer, that any animal could be so
    stupid. Surely, he cried indignantly, whisking his tail and skipping
    from side to side, surely they knew their beloved Leader, Comrade
    Napoleon, better than that? But the explanation was really very
    simple. The van had previously been the property of the knacker,
    and had been bought by the veterinary surgeon, who had not yet
    painted the old name out. That was how the mistake had arisen.

    The animals were enormously relieved to hear this. And when
    Squealer went on to give further graphic details of Boxer’s death-
    bed, the admirable care he had received, and the expensive
    medicines for which Napoleon had paid without a thought as to the
    cost, their last doubts disappeared and the sorrow that they felt for
    their comrade’s death was tempered by the thought that at least he
    had died happy.

    Napoleon himself appeared at the meeting on the following
    Sunday morning and pronounced a short oration in Boxer’s
    honour. It had not been possible, he said, to bring back their
    lamented comrade’s remains for interment on the farm, but he had
    ordered a large wreath to be made from the laurels in the
    farmhouse garden and sent down to be placed on Boxer’s grave.
    And in a few days’ time the pigs intended to hold a memorial
    banquet in Boxer’s honour. Napoleon ended his speech with a
    reminder of Boxer’s two favourite maxims, “I will work harder” and
    “Comrade Napoleon is always right”— maxims, he said, which
    every animal would do well to adopt as his own.

    On the day appointed for the banquet, a grocer’s van drove up

    93

    from Willingdon and delivered a large wooden crate at the
    farmhouse. That night there was the sound of uproarious singing,
    which was followed by what sounded like a violent quarrel and
    ended at about eleven o’clock with a tremendous crash of glass. No
    one stirred in the farmhouse before noon on the following day, and
    the word went round that from somewhere or other the pigs had
    acquired the money to buy themselves another case of whisky.

    94

    Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    Y
    ears passed. The seasons came and went, the short animal
    lives fled by. A time came when there was no one who
    remembered the old days before the Rebellion, except

    Clover, Benjamin, Moses the raven, and a number of the pigs.

    Muriel was dead; Bluebell, Jessie, and Pincher were dead.
    Jones too was dead — he had died in an inebriates’ home in
    another part of the country. Snowball was forgotten. Boxer was
    forgotten, except by the few who had known him. Clover was an old
    stout mare now, stiff in the joints and with a tendency to rheumy
    eyes. She was two years past the retiring age, but in fact no animal
    had ever actually retired. The talk of setting aside a corner of the
    pasture for superannuated animals had long since been dropped.
    Napoleon was now a mature boar of twenty-four stone. Squealer
    was so fat that he could with difficulty see out of his eyes. Only old
    Benjamin was much the same as ever, except for being a little
    greyer about the muzzle, and, since Boxer’s death, more morose
    and taciturn than ever.

    There were many more creatures on the farm now, though the
    increase was not so great as had been expected in earlier years.
    Many animals had been born to whom the Rebellion was only a
    dim tradition, passed on by word of mouth, and others had been
    bought who had never heard mention of such a thing before their
    arrival. The farm possessed three horses now besides Clover. They
    were fine upstanding beasts, willing workers and good comrades,
    but very stupid. None of them proved able to learn the alphabet

    CHAPTER 10

    95

    beyond the letter B. They accepted everything that they were told
    about the Rebellion and the principles of Animalism, especially
    from Clover, for whom they had an almost filial respect; but it was
    doubtful whether they understood very much of it.

    The farm was more prosperous now, and better organised: it
    had even been enlarged by two fields which had been bought from
    Mr. Pilkington. The windmill had been successfully completed at
    last, and the farm possessed a threshing machine and a hay
    elevator of its own, and various new buildings had been added to it.
    Whymper had bought himself a dogcart. The windmill, however,
    had not after all been used for generating electrical power. It was
    used for milling corn, and brought in a handsome money profit.
    The animals were hard at work building yet another windmill;
    when that one was finished, so it was said, the dynamos would be
    installed. But the luxuries of which Snowball had once taught the
    animals to dream, the stalls with electric light and hot and cold
    water, and the three-day week, were no longer talked about.
    Napoleon had denounced such ideas as contrary to the spirit of
    Animalism. The truest happiness, he said, lay in working hard and
    living frugally.

    Somehow it seemed as though the farm had grown richer
    without making the animals themselves any richer-except, of
    course, for the pigs and the dogs. Perhaps this was partly because
    there were so many pigs and so many dogs. It was not that these
    creatures did not work, after their fashion. There was, as Squealer
    was never tired of explaining, endless work in the supervision and
    organisation of the farm. Much of this work was of a kind that the
    other animals were too ignorant to understand. For example,
    Squealer told them that the pigs had to expend enormous labours
    every day upon mysterious things called “files,” “reports,”

    96

    “minutes,” and “memoranda”. These were large sheets of paper
    which had to be closely covered with writing, and as soon as they
    were so covered, they were burnt in the furnace. This was of the
    highest importance for the welfare of the farm, Squealer said. But
    still, neither pigs nor dogs produced any food by their own labour;
    and there were very many of them, and their appetites were always
    good.

    As for the others, their life, so far as they knew, was as it had
    always been. They were generally hungry, they slept on straw, they
    drank from the pool, they laboured in the fields; in winter they
    were troubled by the cold, and in summer by the flies. Sometimes
    the older ones among them racked their dim memories and tried to
    determine whether in the early days of the Rebellion, when Jones’s
    expulsion was still recent, things had been better or worse than
    now. They could not remember. There was nothing with which
    they could compare their present lives: they had nothing to go
    upon except Squealer’s lists of figures, which invariably
    demonstrated that everything was getting better and better. The
    animals found the problem insoluble; in any case, they had little
    time for speculating on such things now. Only old Benjamin
    professed to remember every detail of his long life and to know
    that things never had been, nor ever could be much better or much
    worse — hunger, hardship, and disappointment being, so he said,
    the unalterable law of life.

    And yet the animals never gave up hope. More, they never lost,
    even for an instant, their sense of honour and privilege in being
    members of Animal Farm. They were still the only farm in the
    whole county — in all England! — owned and operated by animals.
    Not one of them, not even the youngest, not even the newcomers
    who had been brought from farms ten or twenty miles away, ever

    97

    ceased to marvel at that. And when they heard the gun booming
    and saw the green flag fluttering at the masthead, their hearts
    swelled with imperishable pride, and the talk turned always
    towards the old heroic days, the expulsion of Jones, the writing of
    the Seven Commandments, the great battles in which the human
    invaders had been defeated. None of the old dreams had been
    abandoned. The Republic of the Animals which Major had foretold,
    when the green fields of England should be untrodden by human
    feet, was still believed in. Some day it was coming: it might not be
    soon, it might not be with in the lifetime of any animal now living,
    but still it was coming. Even the tune of ‘Beasts of England’ was
    perhaps hummed secretly here and there: at any rate, it was a fact
    that every animal on the farm knew it, though no one would have
    dared to sing it aloud. It might be that their lives were hard and
    that not all of their hopes had been fulfilled; but they were
    conscious that they were not as other animals. If they went hungry,
    it was not from feeding tyrannical human beings; if they worked
    hard, at least they worked for themselves. No creature among them
    went upon two legs. No creature called any other creature
    “Master.” All animals were equal.

    One day in early summer Squealer ordered the sheep to follow
    him, and led them out to a piece of waste ground at the other end
    of the farm, which had become overgrown with birch saplings. The
    sheep spent the whole day there browsing at the leaves under
    Squealer’s supervision. In the evening he returned to the
    farmhouse himself, but, as it was warm weather, told the sheep to
    stay where they were. It ended by their remaining there for a whole
    week, during which time the other animals saw nothing of them.
    Squealer was with them for the greater part of every day. He was,
    he said, teaching them to sing a new song, for which privacy was

    98

    needed.

    It was just after the sheep had returned, on a pleasant evening
    when the animals had finished work and were making their way
    back to the farm buildings, that the terrified neighing of a horse
    sounded from the yard. Startled, the animals stopped in their
    tracks. It was Clover’s voice. She neighed again, and all the animals
    broke into a gallop and rushed into the yard. Then they saw what
    Clover had seen.

    It was a pig walking on his hind legs.

    Yes, it was Squealer. A little awkwardly, as though not quite
    used to supporting his considerable bulk in that position, but with
    perfect balance, he was strolling across the yard. And a moment
    later, out from the door of the farmhouse came a long file of pigs,
    all walking on their hind legs. Some did it better than others, one
    or two were even a trifle unsteady and looked as though they would
    have liked the support of a stick, but every one of them made his
    way right round the yard successfully. And finally there was a
    tremendous baying of dogs and a shrill crowing from the black
    cockerel, and out came Napoleon himself, majestically upright,
    casting haughty glances from side to side, and with his dogs
    gambolling round him.

    He carried a whip in his trotter.

    There was a deadly silence. Amazed, terrified, huddling
    together, the animals watched the long line of pigs march slowly
    round the yard. It was as though the world had turned upside-
    down. Then there came a moment when the first shock had worn
    off and when, in spite of everything-in spite of their terror of the
    dogs, and of the habit, developed through long years, of never
    complaining, never criticising, no matter what happened — they
    might have uttered some word of protest. But just at that moment,

    99

    as though at a signal, all the sheep burst out into a tremendous
    bleating of —

    “Four legs good, two legs BETTER! Four legs good, two legs
    BETTER! Four legs good, two legs BETTER!”

    It went on for five minutes without stopping. And by the time
    the sheep had quieted down, the chance to utter any protest had
    passed, for the pigs had marched back into the farmhouse.

    Benjamin felt a nose nuzzling at his shoulder. He looked
    round. It was Clover. Her old eyes looked dimmer than ever.
    Without saying anything, she tugged gently at his mane and led
    him round to the end of the big barn, where the Seven
    Commandments were written. For a minute or two they stood
    gazing at the tatted wall with its white lettering.

    “My sight is failing,” she said finally. “Even when I was young I
    could not have read what was written there. But it appears to me
    that that wall looks different. Are the Seven Commandments the
    same as they used to be, Benjamin?”

    For once Benjamin consented to break his rule, and he read
    out to her what was written on the wall. There was nothing there
    now except a single Commandment. It ran:

    After that it did not seem strange when next day the pigs who were
    supervising the work of the farm all carried whips in their trotters.
    It did not seem strange to learn that the pigs had bought
    themselves a wireless set, were arranging to install a telephone,
    and had taken out subscriptions to ‘John Bull’, ‘Tit-Bits’, and the
    ‘Daily Mirror’. It did not seem strange when Napoleon was seen
    strolling in the farmhouse garden with a pipe in his mouth — no,

    ALL ANIMALS ARE EQUAL
    BUT SOME ANIMALS ARE MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS

    100

    not even when the pigs took Mr. Jones’s clothes out of the
    wardrobes and put them on, Napoleon himself appearing in a black
    coat, ratcatcher breeches, and leather leggings, while his favourite
    sow appeared in the watered silk dress which Mrs. Jones had been
    used to wearing on Sundays.

    A week later, in the afternoon, a number of dog-carts drove up
    to the farm. A deputation of neighbouring farmers had been invited
    to make a tour of inspection. They were shown all over the farm,
    and expressed great admiration for everything they saw, especially
    the windmill. The animals were weeding the turnip field. They
    worked diligently hardly raising their faces from the ground, and
    not knowing whether to be more frightened of the pigs or of the
    human visitors.

    That evening loud laughter and bursts of singing came from
    the farmhouse. And suddenly, at the sound of the mingled voices,
    the animals were stricken with curiosity. What could be happening
    in there, now that for the first time animals and human beings
    were meeting on terms of equality? With one accord they began to
    creep as quietly as possible into the farmhouse garden.

    At the gate they paused, half frightened to go on but Clover led
    the way in. They tiptoed up to the house, and such animals as were
    tall enough peered in at the dining-room window. There, round the
    long table, sat half a dozen farmers and half a dozen of the more
    eminent pigs, Napoleon himself occupying the seat of honour at
    the head of the table. The pigs appeared completely at ease in their
    chairs. The company had been enjoying a game of cards but had
    broken off for the moment, evidently in order to drink a toast. A
    large jug was circulating, and the mugs were being refilled with
    beer. No one noticed the wondering faces of the animals that gazed
    in at the window.

    101

    Mr. Pilkington, of Foxwood, had stood up, his mug in his hand.
    In a moment, he said, he would ask the present company to drink a
    toast. But before doing so, there were a few words that he felt it
    incumbent upon him to say.

    It was a source of great satisfaction to him, he said — and, he
    was sure, to all others present — to feel that a long period of
    mistrust and misunderstanding had now come to an end. There
    had been a time — not that he, or any of the present company, had
    shared such sentiments — but there had been a time when the
    respected proprietors of Animal Farm had been regarded, he would
    not say with hostility, but perhaps with a certain measure of
    misgiving, by their human neighbours. Unfortunate incidents had
    occurred, mistaken ideas had been current. It had been felt that the
    existence of a farm owned and operated by pigs was somehow
    abnormal and was liable to have an unsettling effect in the
    neighbourhood. Too many farmers had assumed, without due
    enquiry, that on such a farm a spirit of licence and indiscipline
    would prevail. They had been nervous about the effects upon their
    own animals, or even upon their human employees. But all such
    doubts were now dispelled. Today he and his friends had visited
    Animal Farm and inspected every inch of it with their own eyes,
    and what did they find? Not only the most up-to-date methods, but
    a discipline and an orderliness which should be an example to all
    farmers everywhere. He believed that he was right in saying that
    the lower animals on Animal Farm did more work and received less
    food than any animals in the county. Indeed, he and his fellow-
    visitors today had observed many features which they intended to
    introduce on their own farms immediately.

    He would end his remarks, he said, by emphasising once again
    the friendly feelings that subsisted, and ought to subsist, between

    102

    Animal Farm and its neighbours. Between pigs and human beings
    there was not, and there need not be, any clash of interests
    whatever. Their struggles and their difficulties were one. Was not
    the labour problem the same everywhere? Here it became apparent
    that Mr. Pilkington was about to spring some carefully prepared
    witticism on the company, but for a moment he was too overcome
    by amusement to be able to utter it. After much choking, during
    which his various chins turned purple, he managed to get it out: “If
    you have your lower animals to contend with,” he said, “we have
    our lower classes!” This BON MOT set the table in a roar; and Mr.
    Pilkington once again congratulated the pigs on the low rations, the
    long working hours, and the general absence of pampering which
    he had observed on Animal Farm.

    And now, he said finally, he would ask the company to rise to
    their feet and make certain that their glasses were full.
    “Gentlemen,” concluded Mr. Pilkington, “gentlemen, I give you a
    toast: To the prosperity of Animal Farm!”

    There was enthusiastic cheering and stamping of feet.
    Napoleon was so gratified that he left his place and came round the
    table to clink his mug against Mr. Pilkington’s before emptying it.
    When the cheering had died down, Napoleon, who had remained
    on his feet, intimated that he too had a few words to say.

    Like all of Napoleon’s speeches, it was short and to the point.
    He too, he said, was happy that the period of misunderstanding
    was at an end. For a long time there had been rumours —
    circulated, he had reason to think, by some malignant enemy —
    that there was something subversive and even revolutionary in the
    outlook of himself and his colleagues. They had been credited with
    attempting to stir up rebellion among the animals on neighbouring
    farms. Nothing could be further from the truth! Their sole wish,

    103

    now and in the past, was to live at peace and in normal business
    relations with their neighbours. This farm which he had the
    honour to control, he added, was a co-operative enterprise. The
    title-deeds, which were in his own possession, were owned by the
    pigs jointly.

    He did not believe, he said, that any of the old suspicions still
    lingered, but certain changes had been made recently in the routine
    of the farm which should have the effect of promoting confidence
    still further. Hitherto the animals on the farm had had a rather
    foolish custom of addressing one another as “Comrade.” This was
    to be suppressed. There had also been a very strange custom,
    whose origin was unknown, of marching every Sunday morning
    past a boar’s skull which was nailed to a post in the garden. This,
    too, would be suppressed, and the skull had already been buried.
    His visitors might have observed, too, the green flag which flew
    from the masthead. If so, they would perhaps have noted that the
    white hoof and horn with which it had previously been marked had
    now been removed. It would be a plain green flag from now
    onwards.

    He had only one criticism, he said, to make of Mr. Pilkington’s
    excellent and neighbourly speech. Mr. Pilkington had referred
    throughout to “Animal Farm.” He could not of course know — for
    he, Napoleon, was only now for the first time announcing it — that
    the name “Animal Farm” had been abolished. Henceforward the
    farm was to be known as “The Manor Farm”— which, he believed,
    was its correct and original name.

    “Gentlemen,” concluded Napoleon, “I will give you the same
    toast as before, but in a different form. Fill your glasses to the
    brim. Gentlemen, here is my toast: To the prosperity of The Manor
    Farm!”

    104

    There was the same hearty cheering as before, and the mugs
    were emptied to the dregs. But as the animals outside gazed at the
    scene, it seemed to them that some strange thing was happening.
    What was it that had altered in the faces of the pigs? Clover’s old
    dim eyes flitted from one face to another. Some of them had five
    chins, some had four, some had three. But what was it that seemed
    to be melting and changing? Then, the applause having come to an
    end, the company took up their cards and continued the game that
    had been interrupted, and the animals crept silently away.

    But they had not gone twenty yards when they stopped short.
    An uproar of voices was coming from the farmhouse. They rushed
    back and looked through the window again. Yes, a violent quarrel
    was in progress. There were shoutings, bangings on the table, sharp
    suspicious glances, furious denials. The source of the trouble
    appeared to be that Napoleon and Mr. Pilkington had each played
    an ace of spades simultaneously.

    Twelve voices were shouting in anger, and they were all alike.
    No question, now, what had happened to the faces of the pigs. The
    creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig,
    and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say
    which was which.

    November 1943-February 1944

    This web edition published by:

    eBooks@Adelaide
    The University of Adelaide Library

    105

    University of Adelaide
    South Australia 5005

    106

    Πίνακας Περιεχομένων

  • Top
  • 1
    Chapter 1 4
    Chapter 2 13

  • Chapter 3
  • 22
    Chapter 4 30
    Chapter 5 36

  • Chapter 6
  • 47
    Chapter 7 57

  • Chapter 8
  • 69
    Chapter 9 83

  • Chapter 10
  • 95

    107

      Top
      Chapter 1
      Chapter 2
      Chapter 3
      Chapter 4
      Chapter 5
      Chapter 6
      Chapter 7
      Chapter 8
      Chapter 9
      Chapter 10

    Calculate your order
    Pages (275 words)
    Standard price: $0.00
    Client Reviews
    4.9
    Sitejabber
    4.6
    Trustpilot
    4.8
    Our Guarantees
    100% Confidentiality
    Information about customers is confidential and never disclosed to third parties.
    Original Writing
    We complete all papers from scratch. You can get a plagiarism report.
    Timely Delivery
    No missed deadlines – 97% of assignments are completed in time.
    Money Back
    If you're confident that a writer didn't follow your order details, ask for a refund.

    Calculate the price of your order

    You will get a personal manager and a discount.
    We'll send you the first draft for approval by at
    Total price:
    $0.00
    Power up Your Academic Success with the
    Team of Professionals. We’ve Got Your Back.
    Power up Your Study Success with Experts We’ve Got Your Back.

    Order your essay today and save 30% with the discount code ESSAYHELP