Saturday, October 26, 2019
Free Essays - The Seven Commandments of Animal Farm :: Animal Farm
      The Seven Commandments of Animal Farm           The Seven Commandments are the basic principles of animalism worked out by  the pigs and described originally as "unalterable laws" by which the animals  were to live. The Seven Commandments were written on the barn wall for all  animals to see and read if they could. The original Commandments are:                 1. Whatever goes on two legs is an enemy.     2. Whatever goes on four legs, or has wings, is a friend.     3. No animal shall wear clothes.     4. No animal shall sleep in a bed.     5. No animal shall drink alcohol.     6. No animal shall kill any other animal.     7. All animals are equal.                 Almost immediately after the Commandments are written the cows have to be  milked. The milk they produce is taken by the pigs exclusively so the seventh  Commandment seems to be undermined from the very beginning. When the pigs also  start claiming the windfall apples, Squealer explains that they are not taking  them as privilege but because science has shown that milk and apples are  necessary for the pigs' "brain work". This at least satisfies the animals that  they are equal to the pigs but it does not fool the reader.           The first two Commandments are subtly broken in the first years of Animal  Farm but there is no attempt to rewrite them. Snowball, the hero of the Battle  of the Cowshed, becomes an enemy of the farm after his expulsion by Napoleon,  while the resumption of trade via Mr Whymper causes some discussion but, as  Squealer points out, trade was not banned in writing and Mr Whymper is not  treated as a friend.            The first alteration to the Commandments comes after the pigs move back into  the farmhouse. The ban on sleeping in beds is changed in Napoleon's favour by  the addition of the words "with sheets". At this point in the history of the  farm the pigs do not quite have enough power to do what they like and Squealer  is forced to change the Commandments to fit new circumstances. But sleeping in  beds is a minor matter compared to murder, and the next alteration to the  Commandments is far more shocking. After the failures of the winter and the  collapse of the first windmill, the pigs use Snowball as scapegoat.  					    
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