Leader Of Animals example essay topic
The silly animals adopted the phrase Quote 2: "Napoleon is always right". Allowing, without reprimand, the pigs to get up late, dine from Jones' diner service, live in the farmhouse and to sleep on beds showed how unconcerned or worse powerless, the animals were. The animals wasted much time building the windmill when they should have been harvesting crops for food in the belief that Napoleon was right. They worked to exhaustion for the false promises and the visions of a better life.
Napoleon gave himself the credit for every good thing such as the building of the windmill, winning the war against humans and fancy titles such as "Terror of Mankind", and "Protector of Sheepfold". The executions in chapter seven show clearly that the animals surrendered to the increase in the power of Napoleon in a blind manner. Quote 3: .".. the tale of confessions and executions went on, until there was a pile of corpses lying before Napoleon's feet". Napoleon outlawed 'Beasts of England' which served as the only memory of Old Major, his views and the rebellion and instead eulogized himself through a poem written describing his great hollow deeds. This was a malicious use of propaganda and was very effective with Squealer's alluring talk. While the animals bitterly starved, Napoleon sent Squealer to tell them false information and lies about their memories and about Snowball by painting him as the destroyer of the windmill which was the symbol of progress for the animals.
This added to his power for what better job can a leader do than to discriminate a criminal. Quote 4: "Whenever anything went wrong, it became usual to attribute it to Snowball". Napoleon stopped showing in public and had security all the time around him like a king. He had made himself inaccessible, a vital step towards ultimate power. Napoleon changed in a big way at the end, and shed off the false character of being a leader of animals and became a human.
The humans themselves degraded into pigs. If the story were continued, then eventually Napoleon would have got get kicked out and it would all happen again. Was this inevitable? The rebellion was doomed to fail from the beginning because: 1. Many animals didn't have sufficient education to know what happened on the farm.
2. They didn't realize they were being manipulated because they were so stupid. With the help of Squealer's 'smooth-talking', the blank character of Boxer saying Quote 5: "I will work harder", the puppet-like sheep, the ferocious dogs, the uneducated and ignorant animals and Benjamin, the donkey who would never stand up against him, Napoleon had absolute power and absolute power corrupts everybody.