Animal Farm is a novel about farm animals who rebel against their farmer and start a sovereign and egalitarian "Animal Farm" led by the pigs Snowball and Napoleon. As time goes on, the pigs become more corrupt, Snowball becomes the scapegoat of the windmill's destruction, and Napoleon begins to rule through terror. Eventually the pigs become indistinguishable from the humans. The novel is an allegory for the 1917 communist revolution in Russia, the rise of the Soviet state in the 1920s and the Stalinist terror of the 1930s.
Animal Farm (1945) is a satirical novella (which can also be understood as a modern fable or allegory) by George Orwell, ostensibly about a group of animals who oust the humans from the farm on which they live. They run the farm themselves, only to have it degenerate into a brutal tyranny of its own.
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Now if there was one thing that the animals were completely certain of, it was that they did not want Jones back. When it was put to them in this light, they had no more to say. The importance of keeping the pigs in good health was all too obvious. So it was agreed without further argument that the milk and the windfall apples (and also the main crop of apples when they ripened) should be reserved for the pigs alone.
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
When it was all over, the remaining animals, except for the pigs and dogs, crept away in a body. They were shaken and miserable. They did not know which was more shocking--the treachery of the animals who had leagued themselves with Snowball, or the cruel retribution they had just witnessed. In the old days there had often been scenes of bloodshed equally terrible, but it seemed to all of them that it was far worse now that it was happening among themselves. Since Jones had left the farm, until today, no animal had killed another animal.
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
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