ANIMAL FARM(CHAPTER- 6)
SUMMARY
For
the rest of the year, the animals work at a backbreaking pace to farm
enough food for themselves and to build the windmill. The leadership
cuts the rations—Squealer explains that they have simply “readjusted”
them—and the animals receive no food at all unless they work on Sunday
afternoons. But because they believe what the leadership tells them—that
they are working for their own good now, not for Mr. Jones’s—they are
eager to take on the extra labor. Boxer, in particular, commits himself
to Animal Farm, doing the work of three horses but never complaining.
Even though the farm possesses all of the necessary materials to build
the windmill, the project presents a number of difficulties. The animals
struggle over how to break the available stone into manageable sizes
for building without picks and crowbars, which they are unable to use.
They finally solve the problem by learning to raise and then drop big
stones into the quarry, smashing them into usable chunks. By late
summer, the animals have enough broken stone to begin
construction.Although their work is strenuous, the animals suffer no
more than they had under Mr. Jones. They have enough to eat and can
maintain the farm grounds easily now that humans no longer come to cart
off and sell the fruits of their labor. But the farm still needs a
number of items that it cannot produce on its own, such as iron, nails,
and paraffin oil. As existing supplies of these items begin to run low,
Napoleon announces that he has hired a human solicitor, Mr. Whymper, to
assist him in conducting trade on behalf of Animal Farm. The other
animals are taken aback by the idea of engaging in trade with humans,
but Squealer explains that the founding principles of Animal Farm never
included any prohibition against trade and the use of money. He adds
that if the animals think that they recall any such law, they have
simply fallen victim to lies fabricated by the traitor Snowball.Mr.
Whymper begins paying a visit to the farm every Monday, and Napoleon
places orders with him for various supplies. The pigs begin living in
the farmhouse, and rumor has it that they even sleep in beds, a
violation of one of the Seven Commandments. But when Clover asks Muriel
to read her the appropriate commandment, the two find that it now reads
“No animal shall sleep in a bed with sheets.” Squealer explains that
Clover must have simply forgotten the last two words. All animals sleep
in beds, he says—a pile of straw is a bed, after all. Sheets, however,
as a human invention, constitute the true source of evil. He then shames
the other animals into agreeing that the pigs need comfortable repose
in order to think clearly and serve the greater good of the farm.Around
this time, a fearsome storm descends on Animal Farm, knocking down roof
tiles, an elm tree, and even the flagstaff. When the animals go into the
fields, they find, to their horror, that the windmill, on which they
have worked so hard, has been toppled. Napoleon announces in appalled
tones that the windmill has been sabotaged by Snowball, who, he says,
will do anything to destroy Animal Farm. Napoleon passes a death
sentence on Snowball, offering a bushel of apples to the traitor’s
killer. He then gives a passionate speech in which he convinces the
animals that they must rebuild the windmill, despite the backbreaking
toil involved. “Long live the windmill!” he cries. “Long live Animal
Farm!”
Analysis
Part
of the greater importance of the novella owes to its treatment of
Animal Farm not as an isolated entity but as part of a network of
farms—an analogue to the international political arena. Orwell thus
comments on Soviet Russia and the global circumstances in which it
arose. But the tactics that we see the pigs utilizing here—the
overworking of the laboring class, the justification of luxuries
indulged in by the ruling class, the spreading of propaganda to cover up
government failure or ineffectiveness—evoke strategies implemented not
only by communist Russia but also by governments throughout the world
needing to oppress their people in order to consolidate their
power.Napoleon makes the outrageous claim that Snowball was responsible
for the windmill’s destruction in order to shift the blame from his own
shoulders. Governments throughout the world have long bolstered their
standing among the populace by alluding to the horrors of an invisible,
conspiratorial enemy, compared to which their own misdeeds or
deficiencies seem acceptable. Stalin used this tactic in Russia by
evoking a demonized notion of Trotsky, but the strategy has enjoyed
popularity among many other administrations. Indeed, during much of the
twentieth century, it was the communists who served as a convenient
demon to governments in the West: both German and American governments
used the threat of communism to excuse or cover up their own aggressive
behaviors.More broadly, the windmill represents the pigs’ continued
manipulation of the common animals. They not only force the animals to
break their backs to construct the windmill by threatening to withhold
food; they also use the windmill’s collapse—the blame for which, though
it is caused by a storm, rests with the pigs for not having the
foresight to build thicker walls—to play on the animals’ general fear of
being re-enslaved. By deflecting the blame from themselves onto
Snowball, they prevent the common animals from realizing how greatly the
pigs are exploiting them and harness the animals’ energy toward
defeating this purported enemy.In this chapter, Orwell also comments on
the cyclical nature of tyranny. As the pigs gain power, they become
increasingly corrupt. Soon they embody the very iniquity that Animal
Farm was created to overturn. As many political observers have noted,
Stalin and his officials quickly entered into the decadent lifestyles
that had characterized the tsars. The communists themselves had pointed
to these lifestyles in maligning the old administration. Orwell parodies
this phenomenon by sketching his pigs increasingly along the lines of
very grotesque human beings. Throughout the novel, the pigs increasingly
resemble humans, eventually flouting altogether Old Major’s strictures
against adopting human characteristics. With the pigs’ move into the
farmhouse to sleep in the farmer’s beds, Orwell remarks upon the way
that supreme power corrupts all who possess it, transforming all
dictators into ruthless, self-serving, and power-hungry entities that
can subsist only by oppressing others.
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