Question:
animal farm: my final's in one hour! & i never read the ending!?
Liz D
2007-06-12 07:39:10 UTC
help me quick! =( i read up to like ch.6 in the book animal farm but i dont know the rest and i hav no time to read it! im leaving at 11:30 for the final and i hav to write an essay on it!
Twelve answers:
anonymous
2007-06-12 07:41:43 UTC
Uh oh. You need Spark Notes, stat! This will be more reliable than anyone trying to summarize the ending on here. Good luck!



http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/animalfarm/
pardee
2016-10-09 05:21:22 UTC
sure thank you, I relatively have. that's slightly much less dynamic in its message now than it grew to become into on the time it grew to become into written. at that factor Communism grew to become into seen because of fact the main suitable risk to the Western international, yet that has now subsided. the entire factor is an allegory on human nature. The characters can all be actually in comparison to people, the unquestioning, prepared workers; the sneaky, conniving plotters spying on the folk and the Capitalists (pigs) who get all of us to swallow their "idealism", and function a great time mutually as one and all else suffers. Orwell rightly estimated this occasion in Russia. The Comunist leaders and their cronies have been residing the extreme-existence mutually as the folk starved. yet another factor the e book made grew to become into how efficient propaganda and slogans could be in making all of us do what the rulers prefer. in basic terms seem on the flaws politicians as we communicate come out with: "conflict on terror" being repeated advert infinitum is a good occasion!
ngltina
2007-06-12 07:43:10 UTC
Here's a summary of the chapter.

The Literature Network Authors: 260

Books: 1,923

Poems & Short Stories: 3,228

Forum Members: 33,556

Forum Posts: 364,920



Home Authors Shakespeare Bible Quotes Forums Search Books on CD



Literature Network » George Orwell » Animal Farm » Summary Chp. 6



Summary Chp. 6



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Another year passes. The animals work themselves to the bone on the harvest and on the windmill, all under the supervision of the pigs. The animals are asked to work on Sunday afternoons as well, on a voluntary basis, though any animal that did not work on Sunday had their rations halved. By autumn time, it is clear that the harvest is a poorer one than the previous year. This will make the coming winter all the more difficult.

Progress on the windmill is laborious and slow. The stones with which it is to be built have to be hauled to the top of the quarry and thrown from there to the bottom, so that the stones can be broken into the appropriate sizes. It takes until the end of the summer to accumulate enough stone to begin building the windmill, work which depends almost entirely on the tremendous efforts of Boxer, who works himself harder than ever before.

As the work on the harvest and the windmill proceeds, the animals find themselves running out of supplies. Items such as paraffin, seeds, manure and machinery could not be produced on the farm. This problem is resolved when Napoleon announces one day that Animal Farm will henceforth enter into trading arrangements with some of the surrounding farms. Hay and wheat from the farm will be sold, and the hens are told that they will have to give up some of their eggs, a sacrifice that they should be proud to make. Some of the animals are doubtful about this move, seeming to remember an agreement in the early days after the rebellion never to have anything to do with humans. Again, Squealer puts any doubts to rest in the following days, informing them that such a resolution was never written down.

From then on, Napoleon engages a local solicitor to act as the middleman between Animal Farm and the outside world. The solicitor comes every Monday, and his presence makes the other animals very uneasy, but their doubts are eased by their pride in seeing Napoleon give orders to a human.

Shortly afterwards, the pigs move into the farmhouse. They eat in the kitchen, relax in the drawing room, and even sleep in the beds. Some of the animals are very doubtful about this. Clover consults the seven commandments on the gable wall, and asks Muriel to read out the fourth commandment, which states, “No animal shall sleep in a bed with sheets.” Muriel cannot remember sheets being mentioned before. However, helped by the smooth words of Squealer, she assumes that she must have been wrong, She and the other animals accept his argument that the pigs, as the leaders, must have as much comfort as possible to facilitate their brainwork.

The work on the windmill continues. The animals are all extremely proud of their progress so far, except for Benjamin, who expresses no opinion for or against the windmill. By November, the windmill is half finished. However, disaster strikes when a nighttime storm destroys it. The animals all gather around the ruin. Napoleon is silent for a long time, before making the sudden and dramatic announcement that the windmill was destroyed by Snowball. Some pig footprints leading away from the farm are discovered, and Napoleon confirms them to belong to Snowball. The other animals are shocked that their former leader could do such a thing. Napoleon announces that work on rebuilding the windmill will commence immediately.



Literature Network » George Orwell » Animal Farm » Summary Chp. 6







Attention Bookworms:

Buying from Amazon.com? Check out the Amazon Coupons first so you get the best deal.

Shakespeare wrote over 150 sonnets!

Join our Sonnet-A-Day Newsletter and read them all, one at a time.

Email:

As Seen In: USA Today "Hot Sites"



Privacy Advertise Contact Link to Us Demographic Survey Essay Information

Site Copyright © Jalic Inc. 2000 - 2007. All Rights Reserved.
Dylan m
2007-06-12 07:47:13 UTC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_Farm

sums it up nicely



Basically it proves that absolute power corrupts, or at least thats what I get out of it. Where the honest idea of communism may sound good ( where everyone is equal ) someone will find a way to twist it and contort it to become...well animal farm
anonymous
2007-06-12 07:54:55 UTC
when there was a bad storm all the good animals leave. at the end napoleon dies and the others live but the whole farm is distroyed.
anonymous
2007-06-12 07:45:47 UTC
So go read it already! The ending you want me to tell you! Why should I tell you the ending! Ending/shmending, who knows the ending!
anonymous
2007-06-12 07:42:34 UTC
Just tell your instructor that you never read the end--honesty is the best policy.
Buchyex
2007-06-12 07:43:20 UTC
Go and read it. That should help you.
mickjack
2007-06-12 07:53:20 UTC
they were shocked to find that they were being conned!
totok8
2007-06-12 07:41:41 UTC
Are you stupid or something? You deserve to fail.
Amethyst
2007-06-12 07:51:48 UTC
I would say you're in trouble, then...
jcresnick
2007-06-12 08:38:32 UTC
it was all a dream...


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
Loading...