ANIMAL FARM (CHAPTER-3)
SUMMARY
The
animals spend a laborious summer harvesting in the fields. The clever
pigs think of ways for the animals to use the humans’ tools, and every
animal participates in the work, each according to his capacity. The
resulting harvest exceeds any that the farm has ever known. Only Mollie
and the cat shirk their duties. The powerful and hard-working Boxer does
most of the heavy labor, adopting “I will work harder!” as a personal
motto. The entire animal community reveres his dedication and strength.
Of all of the animals, only Benjamin, the obstinate donkey, seems to
recognize no change under the new leadership.Every Sunday, the animals
hold a flag-raising ceremony. The flag’s green background represents the
fields of England, and its white hoof and horn symbolize the animals.
The morning rituals also include a democratic meeting, at which the
animals debate and establish new policies for the collective good. At
the meetings, Snowball and Napoleon always voice the loudest opinions,
though their views always clash.Snowball establishes a number of
committees with various goals, such as cleaning the cows’ tails and
re-educating the rats and rabbits. Most of these committees fail to
accomplish their aims, but the classes designed to teach all of the farm
animals how to read and write meet with some success. By the end of the
summer, all of the animals achieve some degree of literacy. The pigs
become fluent in reading and writing, while some of the dogs are able to
learn to read the Seven Commandments. Muriel the goat can read scraps
of newspaper, while Clover knows the alphabet but cannot string the
letters together. Poor Boxer never gets beyond the letter D. When
it becomes apparent that many of the animals are unable to memorize the
Seven Commandments, Snowball reduces the principles to one essential
maxim, which he says contains the heart of Animalism: “Four legs good,
two legs bad.” The birds take offense until Snowball hastily explains
that wings count as legs. The other animals accept the maxim without
argument, and the sheep begin to chant it at random times, mindlessly,
as if it were a song.Napoleon takes no interest in Snowball’s
committees. When the dogs Jessie and Bluebell each give birth to
puppies, he takes the puppies into his own care, saying that the
training of the young should take priority over adult education. He
raises the puppies in a loft above the harness room, out of sight of the
rest of Animal Farm. Around this time, the animals discover, to their
outrage, that the pigs have been taking all of the milk and apples for
themselves. Squealer explains to them that pigs need milk and apples in
order to think well, and since the pigs’ work is brain work, it is in
everyone’s best interest for the pigs to eat the apples and drink the
milk. Should the pigs’ brains fail because of a lack of apples and milk,
Squealer hints, Mr. Jones might come back to take over the farm. This
prospect frightens the other animals, and they agree to forgo milk and
apples in the interest of the collective good.
Analysis
Boxer’s
motto, in response to the increased labors on Animal Farm, of “I will
work harder” is an exact echo of the immigrant Jurgis Rudkus’s motto, in
response to financial problems, in Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle. Whereas
Boxer exerts himself for the common good, as his socialist society
dictates he must, Jurgis exerts himself for his own good, as his
capitalist society dictates he must. Both possess a blind faith that the
key to happiness lies in conforming to the existing political-economic
system. Committed to socialism, Orwell would almost certainly have read The Jungle, which,
published in its entirety in 1906, was a searing indictment of
capitalism and galvanized the American socialist movement. His
appropriation of Jurgis’s motto for Boxer implicitly links the
oppression of capitalism with that of totalitarian communism, as, in
each case, the state wholly ignores the suffering of those who strive to
be virtuous and work within the system.The varying degrees of literacy
among the animals suggest the necessity of sharing information in order
for freedom to be maintained. To the pigs’ credit, they do try to teach
the other animals the basics of reading and writing, but the other
animals prove unable or unwilling. The result is a dangerous imbalance
in knowledge, as the pigs become the sole guardians and interpreters of
Animal Farm’s guiding principles. The discrepancy among the animals’
capacity for abstract thought leads the pigs to condense the Seven
Commandments into one supreme slogan: “Four legs good, two legs bad.”
The birds’ objection to the slogan points immediately to the phrase’s
excessive simplicity. Whereas the Seven Commandments that the pigs
formulate are a detailed mix of antihuman directives (“No animal shall
wear clothes”), moral value judgments (“No animal shall kill another
animal”), and utopian ideals (“All animals are equal”), the new,
reductive slogan contains none of these elements; it merely establishes a
bold dichotomy that masks the pigs’ treachery. The motto has undergone
such generalization that it has become propaganda, a rallying cry that
will keep the common animals focused on the pigs’ rhetoric so that they
will ignore their own unhappiness.In its simplicity, this new, brief
slogan is all too easy to understand and becomes ingrained in even the
most dull-witted of minds, minds that cannot think critically about how
the slogan, while seeming to galvanize the animals’ crusade for freedom,
actually enables the pigs to institute their own oppressive regime. The
animals themselves may be partially responsible for this power
imbalance: on the whole, they show little true initiative to learn—the
dogs have no interest in reading anything but the Seven Commandments,
and Benjamin decides not to put his ample reading skills to use. Though
the birds don’t understand Snowball’s long-winded explanation of why
wings count as legs, they accept it nonetheless, trusting in their
leader. It would be unfair, however, to fault the common animals for
their failure to realize that the pigs mean to oppress them. Their
fervor in singing “Beasts of England” and willingness to follow the
pigs’ instructions demonstrate their virtuous desire to make life better
for one another. The common animals cannot be blamed for their lesser
intelligence. The pigs, however, mix their intelligence with ruthless
guile and take advantage of the other animals’ apathy. Their
machinations are reprehensible.Squealer figures crucially in the novel,
as his proficiency in spreading lie-filled propaganda allows the pigs to
conceal their acts of greed beneath a veneer of common good. His
statements and behaviors exemplify the linguistic and psychological
methods that the pigs use to control the other animals while convincing
them that this strict regime is essential if the animals want to avoid
becoming subject to human cruelty again. In the opinion of Orwell, the
socialist goals of the Russian Revolution quickly became meaningless
rhetorical tools used by the communists to control the people: the
intelligentsia began to interpret the “good of the state” to mean the
good of itself as a class, and anyone who opposed it was branded an
“enemy of the people.” On Animal Farm, Squealer makes himself useful to
the other pigs by pretending to side with the oppressed animals and
falsely aligning the common good with the good of the pigs.
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