ANIMAL FARM (CHAPTER -10)
SUMMARY
Years
pass. Many animals age and die, and few recall the days before the
Rebellion. The animals complete a new windmill, which is used not for
generating electricity but for milling corn, a far more profitable
endeavor. The farm seems to have grown richer, but only the many pigs
and dogs live comfortable lives. Squealer explains that the pigs and
dogs do very important work—filling out forms and such. The other
animals largely accept this explanation, and their lives go on very much
as before. They never lose their sense of pride in Animal Farm or their
feeling that they have differentiated themselves from animals on other
farms. The inhabitants of Animal Farm still fervently believe in the
goals of the Rebellion—a world free from humans, with equality for all
animals.One day, Squealer takes the sheep off to a remote spot to teach
them a new chant. Not long afterward, the animals have just finished
their day’s work when they hear the terrified neighing of a horse. It is
Clover, and she summons the others hastily to the yard. There, the
animals gaze in amazement at Squealer walking toward them on his hind
legs. Napoleon soon appears as well, walking upright; worse, he carries a
whip. Before the other animals have a chance to react to the change,
the sheep begin to chant, as if on cue: “Four legs good, two legs
better!” Clover, whose eyes are failing in her old age, asks Benjamin to
read the writing on the barn wall where the Seven Commandments were
originally inscribed. Only the last commandment remains: “all animals
are equal.” However, it now carries an addition: “but some animals are
more equal than others.” In the days that follow, Napoleon openly begins
smoking a pipe, and the other pigs subscribe to human magazines, listen
to the radio, and begin to install a telephone, also wearing human
clothes that they have salvaged from Mr. Jones’s wardrobe.One day, the
pigs invite neighboring human farmers over to inspect Animal Farm. The
farmers praise the pigs and express, in diplomatic language, their
regret for past “misunderstandings.” The other animals, led by Clover,
watch through a window as Mr. Pilkington and Napoleon toast each other,
and Mr. Pilkington declares that the farmers share a problem with the
pigs: “If you have your lower animals to contend with,” he says, “we
have our lower classes!” Mr. Pilkington notes with appreciation that the
pigs have found ways to make Animal Farm’s animals work harder and on
less food than any other group of farm animals in the county. He adds
that he looks forward to introducing these advances on his own farm.
Napoleon replies by reassuring his human guests that the pigs never
wanted anything other than to conduct business peacefully with their
human neighbors and that they have taken steps to further that goal.
Animals on Animal Farm will no longer address one another as “Comrade,”
he says, or pay homage to Old Major; nor will they salute a flag with a
horn and hoof upon it. All of these customs have been changed recently
by decree, he assures the men. Napoleon even announces that Animal Farm
will now be known as the Manor Farm, which is, he believes, its “correct
and original name.”The pigs and farmers return to their amiable card
game, and the other animals creep away from the window. Soon the sounds
of a quarrel draw them back to listen. Napoleon and Pilkington have
played the ace of spades simultaneously, and each accuses the other of
cheating. The animals, watching through the window, realize with a start
that, as they look around the room of the farmhouse, they can no longer
distinguish which of the cardplayers are pigs and which are human
beings.
Analysis
The last chapter of Animal Farm brings
the novel to its logical, unavoidable, yet chilling conclusion. The
pigs wholly consolidate their power and their totalitarian, communist
dictatorship completely overwhelms the democratic-socialist ideal of
Animal Farm. Napoleon and the other pigs have become identical to the
human farmers, just as Stalin and the Russian communists eventually
became indistinguishable from the aristocrats whom they had replaced and
the Western capitalists whom they had denounced. The significance of
Napoleon’s name is now entirely clear: the historical Napoleon, who
ruled France in the early nineteenth century and conquered much of
Europe before being defeated at the Battle of Waterloo in 1814,
originally appeared to be a great liberator, overthrowing Europe’s kings
and monarchs and bringing freedom to its people. But he eventually
crowned himself emperor of France, shattering the dreams of European
liberalism. Rather than destroying the aristocracy, Napoleon simply
remade it around himself. Similarly, the pig Napoleon figures as the
champion of Animalism early on. Now, however, he protests to the humans
that he wants nothing more than to be one of them—that is, an
oppressor.Throughout the novella, Orwell has told his fable from the
animals’ point of view. In this chapter, we see clearly the dramatic
power achieved by this narrative strategy. The animals remain naïvely
hopeful up until the very end. Although they realize that the republic
foretold by Old Major has yet to come to fruition, they stalwartly
insist that it will come “[s]ome day.” These assertions charge the final
events of the story with an intense irony. For although Orwell has used
foreshadowing and subtle hints to make us more suspicious than the
animals of the pigs’ motives, these statements of ingenuous faith in
Animal Farm on the part of the common animals occur just before the
final scene. This gap between the animals’ optimism and the harsh
reality of the pigs’ totalitarian rule creates a sense of dramatic
contrast. Although the descent into tyranny has been gradual, Orwell
provides us with a restatement of the original ideals only moments
before the full revelation of their betrayal.Orwell uses emphatic
one-line paragraphs to heighten the terror of this betrayal: the
succinct conveyance of “It was a pig walking on his hind legs” and “He
carried a whip in his trotter” drops this stunning information on us
without warning, shocking us as much as it does the animals. Moreover,
Orwell’s decision to tell the story from the animals’ point of view
renders his final tableau all the more terrible. The picture of the pigs
and farmers, indistinguishable from one another, playing cards together
is disturbing enough by itself. Orwell, however, enables us to view
this scene from the animals’ perspective—from the outside looking in. By
framing the scene in this way, Orwell points to the animals’ total loss
of power and entitlement: Animal Farm has not created a society of
equals but has simply established a new class of oppressors to dominate
the same class of oppressed—a division embodied, as at the opening of
the novella, by the farmhouse wall.The final distillation of the Seven
Commandments that appears on the barn—“all animals are equal, but some
are more equal than others”—stands as the last great example of how
those in power manipulate language as an instrument of control. At the
beginning of the novella, the idea of “more equal” would not only have
seemed contrary to the egalitarian socialist spirit of Animal Farm, it
would have seemed logically impossible. But after years of violence,
hunger, dishonesty, and fear, the spirit of Animal Farm seems lost to a
distant past. The concept of inherent equality has given way to notions
of material entitlement: Animal Farm as an institution no longer values
dignity and social justice; power alone renders a creature worthy of
rights. By claiming to be “more equal”—an inherently nonsensical
concept—than the other animals, the pigs have distorted the original
ideals of the farm beyond recognition and have literally stepped into
the shoes of their former tyrannical masters
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