ANIMAL FARM (CHAPTER-9)
SUMMARY
Wearily
and weakly, the animals set about rebuilding the windmill. Though Boxer
remains seriously injured, he shows no sign of being in pain and
refuses to leave his work for even a day. Clover makes him a poultice
for his hoof, and he eventually does seem to improve, but his coat
doesn’t seem as shiny as before and his great strength seems slightly
diminished. He says that his only goal is to see the windmill off to a
good start before he retires. Though no animal has yet retired on Animal
Farm, it had previously been agreed that all horses could do so at the
age of twelve. Boxer now nears this age, and he looks forward to a
comfortable life in the pasture as a reward for his immense labors.Food
grows ever more scarce, and all animals receive reduced rations, except
for the pigs and the dogs. Squealer continues to produce statistics
proving that, even with this “readjustment,” the rations exceed those
that they received under Mr. Jones. After all, Squealer says, when the
pigs and dogs receive good nourishment, the whole community stands to
benefit. When four sows give birth to Napoleon’s piglets, thirty-one in
all, Napoleon commands that a schoolhouse be built for their education,
despite the farm’s dwindling funds. Napoleon begins ordering events
called Spontaneous Demonstrations, at which the animals march around the
farm, listen to speeches, and exult in the glory of Animal Farm. When
other animals complain, the sheep, who love these Spontaneous
Demonstrations, drown them out with chants of “Four legs good, two legs
bad!”In April, the government declares Animal Farm a republic, and
Napoleon becomes president in a unanimous vote, having been the only
candidate. The same day, the leadership reveals new discoveries about
Snowball’s complicity with Jones at the Battle of the Cowshed. It now
appears that Snowball actually fought openly on Jones’s side and cried
“Long live Humanity!” at the outset of the fight. The battle took place
so long ago, and seems so distant, that the animals placidly accept this
new story. Around the same time, Moses the raven returns to the farm
and once again begins spreading his stories about Sugarcandy Mountain.
Though the pigs officially denounce these stories, as they did at the
outset of their administration, they nonetheless allow Moses to live on
the farm without requiring him to work.One day, Boxer’s strength fails;
he collapses while pulling stone for the windmill. The other animals
rush to tell Squealer, while Benjamin and Clover stay near their friend.
The pigs announce that they will arrange to bring Boxer to a human
hospital to recuperate, but when the cart arrives, Benjamin reads the
writing on the cart’s sideboards and announces that Boxer is being sent
to a glue maker to be slaughtered. The animals panic and begin crying
out to Boxer that he must escape. They hear him kicking feebly inside
the cart, but he is unable to get out.Soon Squealer announces that the
doctors could not cure Boxer: he has died at the hospital. He claims to
have been at the great horse’s side as he died and calls it the most
moving sight he has ever seen—he says that Boxer died praising the
glories of Animal Farm. Squealer denounces the false rumors that Boxer
was taken to a glue factory, saying that the hospital had simply bought
the cart from a glue maker and had failed to paint over the lettering.
The animals heave a sigh of relief at this news, and when Napoleon gives
a great speech in praise of Boxer, they feel completely soothed.Not
long after the speech, the farmhouse receives a delivery from the
grocer, and sounds of revelry erupt from within. The animals murmur
among themselves that the pigs have found the money to buy another crate
of whisky—though no one knows where they found the money.As members of
the revolutionary era in Russia began to expect to receive some
compensation for all of the terrible sacrifices they had made in the
revolution and in the war with Germany, they became painfully aware of
the full extent of their betrayal at the hands of the Stalinist
leadership. The quality of life for the average citizen continued to
decline, even as the ruling class grew ever larger and consumed ever
more luxuries. Orwell uses Boxer’s death as a searing indictment of such
totalitarian rule, and his death points sadly and bitterly to the
downfall of Animal Farm. The great horse seems to have no bad qualities
apart from his limited intellect, but, in the end, he falls victim to
his own virtues—loyalty and the willingness to work. Thus, Boxer’s great
mistake lies in his conflation of the ideal of Animal Farm with the
character of Napoleon: never thinking for himself about how the society
should best realize its founding ideals, Boxer simply follows Napoleon’s
orders blindly, naïvely assuming that the pigs have the farm’s best
interest at heart. It is sadly ironic that the system that he so loyally
serves ultimately betrays him: he works for the good of all but is sold
for the good of the few.The pig leadership’s treachery and hypocrisy
becomes even more apparent in the specific manner of Boxer’s death: by
selling Boxer for profit, the pigs reenact the very same cruelties
against which the Rebellion first fights—the valuing of animals for
their material worth rather than their dignity as living creatures. When
a new crate of whisky arrives for the pigs, we can reasonably infer
that the money for it has come from the sale of Boxer. Moreover, the
intensely pathetic nature of Boxer’s fate—death in a glue
factory—contrasts greatly with his noble character, and the contrast
contributes to the dramatic effect of Boxer’s death, increasing the
power of Orwell’s critique. Boxer’s life and death provide a microcosm
for Orwell’s conception of the ways in which the Russian communist power
apparatus treated the working class that it purported to serve: Orwell
suggests that the administration exhausted the resources of the workers
for its own benefit and then mercilessly discarded them.In order to
defuse potential outrage at his blatant cruelty, Napoleon brings Moses
back and allows him to tell his tales of Sugarcandy Mountain, much as
Stalin made a place for the once-taboo Russian Orthodox Church after
World War II. Moses’s return signals the full return of oppression to
the farm. While the pigs object early on to Moses’s teachings because
they undermine the animals’ will to rebel, they now embrace the
teachings for precisely the same reason. Napoleon further hopes to
appease his populace by means of his Spontaneous Demonstrations, which
force the animals to go through the motions of loyalty, despite what
they may actually feel. The name of the new ritual bears particular
irony: these gatherings are anything but spontaneous and demonstrate
very little beyond a fearful conformity. The irony of the title
indicates the overriding hollowness of the event.Because the elite class
controls the dissemination of information on Animal Farm, it is able to
hide the terrible truth of its exploitation of the other animals.
Fallible individual memories of Snowball’s bravery and Napoleon’s
cowardice at the Battle of the Cowshed prove no match for the
collective, officially sponsored memory that Squealer constructs, which
paints a picture indicating completely the reverse. With no historical,
political, or military resources at their command, the common animals
have no choice but to go along with the charade
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