ANIMAL FARM (CHAPTER - 4)
SUMMARY
By
late summer, news of Animal Farm has spread across half the county. Mr.
Jones lives ignominiously in Willingdon, drinking and complaining about
his misfortune. Mr. Pilkington and Mr. Frederick, who own the adjoining
farms, fear that disenchantment will spread among their own animals.
Their rivalry with each other, however, prevents them from working
together against Animal Farm. They merely spread rumors about the farm’s
inefficiency and moral reprehensibility. Meanwhile, animals everywhere
begin singing “Beasts of England,” which they have learned from flocks
of pigeons sent by Snowball, and many begin to behave rebelliously.At
last, in early October, a flight of pigeons alerts Animal Farm that Mr.
Jones has begun marching on the farm with some of Pilkington’s and
Frederick’s men. Snowball, who has studied books about the battle
campaigns of the renowned Roman general Julius Caesar, prepares a
defense and leads the animals in an ambush on the men. Boxer fights
courageously, as does Snowball, and the humans suffer a quick defeat.
The animals’ losses amount only to a single sheep, whom they give a
hero’s burial. Boxer, who believes that he has unintentionally killed a
stable boy in the chaos, expresses his regret at taking a life, even
though it is a human one. Snowball tells him not to feel guilty,
asserting that “the only good human being is a dead one.” Mollie, as is
her custom, has avoided any risk to herself by hiding during the battle.
Snowball and Boxer each receive medals with the inscription “Animal
Hero, First Class.” The animals discover Mr. Jones’s gun where he
dropped it in the mud. They place it at the base of the flagstaff,
agreeing to fire it twice a year: on October 12th, the anniversary of
the Battle of the Cowshed—as they have dubbed their victory—and on
Midsummer’s Day, the anniversary of the Rebellion.
Analysis
This
chapter extends the allegory of the Russian Revolution to Russia’s
interwar period. The spread of Animalism to surrounding farms evokes the
attempts by Leon Trotsky to establish communism as an international
movement. Trotsky believed, as did Karl Marx, that communism could only
achieve its goals if implemented on a global scale, and he devoted much
of his formidable intelligence and eloquence to setting off what Western
leaders later called the “Domino Effect.” The Domino Effect, or Domino
Theory, posited that the conversion or “fall” of a noncommunist state to
communism would precipitate the fall of other noncommunist governments
in nearby states. Presidents Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson
used this theory to justify their military involvement in Greece,
Turkey, and Vietnam—countries they hoped to “save” from the spread of
communism. In Animal Farm, the proprietors of the neighboring
farms fear a similar contagion, which we might term the “Snowball
Effect.” Just as the West tried to discredit Russian communism, so do
Mr. Pilkington and Mr. Frederick spread disparaging rumors about Animal
Farm. Just as diplomatic skirmishes between the West and Russia ended up
bolstering Trotsky and his allies, the armed skirmish between humans
and animals ends up strengthening the animals’ hold on the farm.In this
chapter, Orwell makes masterful use of irony, an important component of
satirical writing, to illustrate the gap between what the animals are
fighting for and what they believe they are fighting for. All of the
animals—except Mollie—fight their hardest in the Battle of the Cowshed,
but as Chapter III demonstrates, they do not fully understand the ideals
for which they fight, the principles that they defend. In putting all
of their energies toward expelling the humans, the animals believe that
they are protecting themselves from oppression. In reality, however,
they are simply and unwittingly consolidating the pigs’ power by muting
the primary threat to the pigs’ regime—the human menace. Moreover,
though the animals are prepared to give their lives in defense of Animal
Farm, they appear unprepared to deal with the consequences of their
fight: Boxer is horrified when he thinks that he has killed the stable
boy.Snowball’s emphatic declaration after the battle of the need for all
animals “to be ready to die for Animal Farm” sets up Orwell’s scrutiny
of the motivations behind mass violence and manipulative leadership.
Many readers have assumed thatAnimal Farm, in its critique of
totalitarian communism, advocates the Western capitalist way of life as
an alternative. Yet a closer reading suggests that Orwell may take a
more complicated stance. For if the animals represent the Russian
communists and the farmers represent noncommunist leaders, we see that
Orwell denounces the communists, but also portrays the noncommunists in a
very harsh light. Mr. Jones proves an irresponsible and neglectful farm
owner, and neither Mr. Pilkington nor Mr. Frederick hesitates to quash
violently any animal uprisings that threaten his own supremacy. There is
nothing noble in the men’s unprovoked attack on Animal Farm—they
undertake this crusade merely out of self-interest.
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