ANIMAL FARM (CHAPTER-5 )
SUMMARY
Mollie
becomes an increasing burden on Animal Farm: she arrives late for work,
accepts treats from men associated with nearby farms, and generally
behaves contrary to the tenets of Animalism. Eventually she disappears,
lured away by a fat, red-faced man who stroked her coat and fed her
sugar; now she pulls his carriage. None of the other animals ever
mentions her name again.During the cold winter months, the animals hold
their meetings in the big barn, and Snowball and Napoleon’s constant
disagreements continue to dominate the proceedings. Snowball proves a
better speaker and debater, but Napoleon can better canvass for support
in between meetings. Snowball brims with ideas for improving the farm:
he studies Mr. Jones’s books and eventually concocts a scheme to build a
windmill, with which the animals could generate electricity and
automate many farming tasks, bringing new comforts to the animals’
lives. But building the windmill would entail much hard work and
difficulty, and Napoleon contends that the animals should attend to
their current needs rather than plan for a distant future. The question
deeply divides the animals. Napoleon surveys Snowball’s plans and
expresses his contempt by urinating on them.When Snowball has finally
completed his plans, all assemble for a great meeting to decide whether
to undertake the windmill project. Snowball gives a passionate speech,
to which Napoleon responds with a pathetically unaffecting and brief
retort. Snowball speaks further, inspiring the animals with his
descriptions of the wonders of electricity. Just as the animals prepare
to vote, however, Napoleon gives a strange whimper, and nine enormous
dogs wearing brass-studded collars charge into the barn, attack
Snowball, and chase him off the farm. They return to Napoleon’s side,
and, with the dogs growling menacingly, Napoleon announces that from now
on meetings will be held only for ceremonial purposes. He states that
all important decisions will fall to the pigs alone.Afterward, many of
the animals feel confused and disturbed. Squealer explains to them that
Napoleon is making a great sacrifice in taking the leadership
responsibilities upon himself and that, as the cleverest animal, he
serves the best interest of all by making the decisions. These
statements placate the animals, though they still question the expulsion
of Snowball. Squealer explains that Snowball was a traitor and a
criminal. Eventually, the animals come to accept this version of events,
and Boxer adds greatly to Napoleon’s prestige by adopting the maxims “I
will work harder” and “Napoleon is always right.” These two maxims soon
reinforce each other when, three weeks after the banishment of
Snowball, the animals learn that Napoleon supports the windmill project.
Squealer explains that their leader never really opposed the proposal;
he simply used his apparent opposition as a maneuver to oust the wicked
Snowball. These tactics, he claims, served to advance the collective
best interest. Squealer’s words prove so appealing, and the growls of
his three-dog entourage so threatening, that the animals accept his
explanation without question.
Analysis
This
chapter illuminates Napoleon’s corrupt and power-hungry motivations. He
openly and unabashedly seizes power for himself, banishes Snowball with
no justification, and shows a bald-faced willingness to rewrite history
in order to further his own ends. Similarly, Stalin forced Trotsky from
Russia and seized control of the country after Lenin’s death. Orwell’s
experience in a persecuted Trotskyist political group in the late 1930s
during the Spanish Civil War may have contributed to his comparatively
positive portrayal of Snowball. Trotsky was eventually murdered in
Mexico, but Stalin continued to evoke him as a phantom threat, the
symbol of all enemy forces, when he began his bloody purges of the
1930s. These purges appear in allegorized form in the next chapters of Animal Farm.Lenin
once famously remarked that communism was merely socialism plus the
electrification of the countryside, a comment that reveals the
importance of technological modernization to leaders in the young Soviet
Union. The centrality of the electrification projects in the Soviet
Union inspired the inclusion of the windmill in Animal Farm. Communist
leaders considered such programs absolutely essential for their new
nation, citing their need to upgrade an infrastructure neglected by the
tsars and keep up with the relatively advanced and increasingly hostile
West. Russia devoted a great deal of brain- and manpower to putting
these programs in place. As suggested by the plot of Animal Farm, Stalin
initially balked at the idea of a national emphasis on modern
technology, only to embrace such plans wholeheartedly once he had
secured his position as dictator.This chapter lies near the middle of
Orwell’s narrative and, in many ways, represents the climax of the
tension that has been building from the beginning. Since the animals’
initial victory over Mr. Jones, we have suspected the motives of the pig
intelligentsia and Napoleon in particular: ever since the revelation in
Chapter III that they have been stealing apples and milk for
themselves, the pigs have appeared more interested in grabbing resources
and power than in furthering the good of the farm. Now, when Napoleon
sets his dogs on Snowball, he proves that his socialist rhetoric about
the common good is quite empty. The specifics of Napoleon’s takeover
bespeak a long period of careful plotting: Napoleon has been
deliberating his seizure of power ever since he first took control of
the dogs’ training, in Chapter III. Thus, the banishment of Snowball
constitutes the culmination of long-held resentments and aspirations and
climactically justifies our feelings of uneasiness about Napoleon.In
his use of the dogs, Napoleon has monopolized the farm’s sources of
defense and protection—the dogs could have guarded the farm and warded
off predators—in order to create his own private secret police. The pigs
claim a parallel monopoly on logic. Squealer linguistically transforms
Napoleon’s self-serving act of banishing Snowball into a supreme example
of self-sacrifice and manages to convince the animals that no
contradiction underlies the leader’s abrupt about-face on the issue of
the windmill. Each of Napoleon’s acts of physical violence thus gains
acceptance and legitimacy via a corresponding exercise of verbal
violence. Political subversion depends on a subversion of logic and
language. The connection between these two forms of violence and
subversion remained a central concern for Orwell throughout his life,
and he examines it both in later chapters of Animal Farm and in his last major novel, 1984.
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