ANIMAL FARM (CHAPTER-8)
SUMMARY
A
few days after the bloody executions, the animals discover that the
commandment reading “No animal shall kill any other animal” now reads:
“No animal shall kill any other animal without cause.” As with the
previous revisions of commandments, the animals blame the apparent
change on their faulty memories—they must have forgotten the final two
words. The animals work even harder throughout the year to rebuild the
windmill. Though they often suffer from hunger and the cold, Squealer
reads continuously from a list of statistics proving that conditions
remain far superior to anything the animals knew under Mr. Jones and
that they only continue to improve.Napoleon has now taken the title of
“Leader” and has dozens of other complimentary titles as well. Minimus
has written a poem in praise of the Napoleon and inscribed it on the
barn wall. A pile of timber lies unused on the farm, left over from the
days of Mr. Jones, and Napoleon engages in complicated negotiations for
the sale of it to either Mr. Frederick or Mr. Pilkington. When
negotiations favor Mr. Frederick, the pigs teach the animals to hate Mr.
Pilkington. When Mr. Pilkington then appears ready to buy the timber,
the pigs teach the animals to hate Mr. Frederick with equal ferocity.
Whichever farm is currently out of favor is said to be the hiding place
of Snowball. Following a slew of propaganda against Mr. Frederick
(during which Napoleon adopts the maxim “Death to Frederick!”), the
animals are shocked to learn that Mr. Frederick eventually comes through
as the buyer of the timber. The pigs talk endlessly about Napoleon’s
cleverness, for, rather than accept a check for the timber, he insists
on receiving cash. The five-pound notes are now in his possession.Soon
the animals complete the construction of the windmill. But before they
can put it to use, Napoleon discovers to his great outrage that the
money Mr. Frederick gave him for the timber is simply a stack of
forgeries. He warns the animals to prepare for the worst, and, indeed,
Mr. Frederick soon attacks Animal Farm with a large group of armed men.
The animals cower as Mr. Frederick’s men plant dynamite at the base of
the windmill and blow the whole structure up. Enraged, the animals
attack the men, driving them away, but at a heavy cost: several of the
animals are killed, and Boxer sustains a serious injury. The animals are
disheartened, but a patriotic flag-raising ceremony cheers them up and
restores their faith somewhat.Not long afterward, the pigs discover a
crate of whisky in the farmhouse basement. That night, the animals hear
singing and revelry from within, followed by the sound of a terrible
quarrel. The next morning the pigs look bleary-eyed and sick, and the
animals hear whisperings that Comrade Napoleon may be dying. By evening,
however, he has recovered. The next night, some of the animals find
Squealer near the barn, holding a paintbrush; he has fallen from a
ladder leaned up against the spot where the Seven Commandments are
painted on the barn. The animals fail to put two and two together,
however, and when they discover that the commandment that they recall as
stating “No animal shall drink alcohol” actually reads “No animal shall
drink alcohol to excess,” they once again blame their memories for
being faulty.
Analysis
By
this point, Napoleon and Squealer have so systematically perverted the
truth that the animals cannot recognize their leaders’ duplicity even
when they witness it directly. Karl Marx had theorized the need for a
“dictatorship of the proletariat” during the early years of his
prescribed revolution, under which democratic freedoms would take second
place to stamping out resistance in the bourgeoisie. In Soviet Russia,
Stalin and his colleagues used Marx’s theories as a justification for
their increasingly violent and tyrannical actions. Moreover, they used
this one Marxist principle to justify their neglect of the other
principles. The Stalinist government, for example, quickly altered the
noble ideals of equal work and equal compensation in order to favor the
politically and militarily powerful. Even when the machinations of the
government became clear to everyone in Russia—in the novella we see such
a moment when the animals catch Squealer literally rewriting the law on
the side of the barn—no significant popular revolt among the working
classes ever occurred. Similarly, the animals show no signs of
rebellion.Minimus’s poem provides compelling evidence for the animals’
largely uncritical attitude toward the regime that oppresses it. Though
the poem is outrageously inflated and tastelessly sentimental, the
animals don’t question it; instead, they allow it to speak for them.
With the poem, Orwell creates a passage of great irony and a wonderful
satire of patriotic rhetoric. Much of the poem’s humor arises from its
combination of high and low language, exposing the ridiculousness of
what it intends to celebrate. Thus, the poem praises Napoleon as
“Fountain of happiness!” but also “Lord of the swill-bucket!” While it
glorifies life under Napoleon, it emphasizes its simple triviality: “All
that [his] creatures love” amounts to a “full belly” and “clean straw.”
This stylistic use of contrast helps render the poem’s tone of utter
devotion (“Oh how my soul is on / Fire”) a mockery of itself. At the
same time, of course, the poem parodies actual anthems and patriotic
odes. Orwell aims to expose the inanity of such patriotic sentiment, and
also its emptiness, if not its misdirection. He suggests that such
rhetoric fails to examine the essence of that which it praisesThe
description of Napoleon’s dealings with his neighbors, Mr. Pilkington
and Mr. Frederick, elaborately parodies Stalin’s diplomatic tap dance
with Germany and the Allies at the outset of World War II. Stalin, faced
with an unpleasant choice between the capitalist Allies and the fascist
Germans and reluctant to enter into another large war, stalled by
alternately siding with one country and then the other, using propaganda
to drag the populace along with his changing allegiances. At the last
minute, and quite unexpectedly, he signed the Non-Aggression Pact (an
agreement not to wage war on each other) with the German leader Adolf
Hitler, much as Napoleon makes the surprise move of selling the timber
to Mr. Frederick. Hitler almost immediately went back on his word—as is
evoked by Mr. Frederick’s forged banknotes—and invaded Russia’s western
frontier, eventually killing over twenty-five million Russians and
demolishing much of the infrastructure that the Soviets had built since
the Russian Revolution. In his depiction of the animals’ response to Mr.
Frederick’s gratuitous destruction of the great windmill, Orwell aptly
conveys the tremendous sense of betrayal and feelings of anger that
Russians felt toward Germany during and after World War II.The pigs,
echoing another tactic of the victorious governments after World War II,
use the heroism of individuals from the lower classes to reinforce the
patriotism of the demoralized survivors. Orwell crafts particularly keen
descriptions of the patriotic celebrations and rituals after the
animals’ war with Mr. Frederick’s men. He subtly implies that while such
ceremonies have the apparent function of bestowing the glory of the
state upon the individual, they truly serve the opposite goal: to
transfer the nobility of individual sacrifices onto the state.There are
several notable parallels between Animal Farm and Orwell’s final novel,1984. One can argue that Animal Farm was even a sort of study for 1984, which applies many of Animal Farm’s
themes and ideas to human society, rendering the horror of totalitarian
government all the more real. One of the principal ideas that each work
addresses is the ability of those in power to control and alter both
attitudes and history, especially by subverting language. Just as
Squealer offers a host of statistics to show that Animal Farm is in
better shape than ever, despite the fact that the animals are hungry and
cold, so too does the Ministry of Plenty, in 1984, crank out
misleading reports about how greatly production has increased; indeed,
the ministry reduces rations but convinces people that it is actually
increasing them. Similarly, Animal Farm’s ever-alternating alliance with
Mr. Frederick and Mr. Pilkington and the leaders’ claim that the farm
has always remained committed to the same farmer reaches the apex of
absurdity in 1984. In the middle of a speech during Hate Week,
the masses mindlessly accept the speaker’s assertion that their country,
Oceania, which has indeed been at war with Eurasia, is actually not at
war and never has been at war with Eurasia. He says the country is and
always has been at war with Eastasia. The masses, carrying explicit
anti-Eurasia signs, become embarrassed about their apparent mistake.
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