Geçtiğimiz yüzyılın en önemli romanlarından biri olan "Animal Farm", dönemin siyasi akımlarına atıfta bulunan sade ve anlaşılır bir üslupla yazılmış, İngiliz Edebiyatı'ndan klasik bir eserdir..
ANIMAL FARM
- GEORGE ORWELL
| CHAPTER ONE | CHAPTER SIX |
| CHAPTER TWO | CHAPTER SEVEN |
| CHAPTER THREE | CHAPTER EIGHT |
| CHAPTER FOUR | CHAPTER NINE |
| CHAPTER FIVE | CHAPTER TEN |
CHAPTER 7
IT WAS a bitter winter. The stormy weather
was followed by sleet and snow, and then by a hard frost which did not break
till well into February. The animals carried on as best they could with the
rebuilding of the windmill, well knowing that the outside world was watching
them and that the envious human beings would rejoice and triumph if the mill
were not finished on time.
Out of spite, the human beings pretended not to believe that it was Snowball who
had destroyer the windmill: they said that it had fallen down because the walls
were too thin. The animals knew that this was not the case. Still, it had been
decided to build the walls three feet thick this time instead of eighteen inches
as before, which meant collecting much larger quantities of stone. For a long
i.ne the quarry was full of snowdrifts and nothing could be done. Some progress
was made in the dry frosty weather that followed, but it was cruel work, and the
animals could not feel so hopeful about it as they had felt before. They were
always cold, and usually hungry as well. Only Boxer and Clover never lost heart.
Squealer made excellent speeches on the joy of service and the dignity of labour,
but the other animals found more inspiration in Boxer's strength and his never-failing
cry of "I will work harder! "
In January food fell short. The corn ration was drastically reduced, and it was
announced that an extra potato ration would be issued to make up for it. Then it
was discovered that the greater part of the potato crop had been frosted in the
clamps, which had not been covered thickly enough. The potatoes had become soft
and discoloured, and only a few were edible. For days at a time the animals had
nothing to eat but chaff and mangels. Starvation seemed to stare them in the
face.
It was vitally necessary to conceal this fact from the outside world. Emboldened
by the collapse of the windmill, the human beings were inventing fresh lies
about Animal Farm. Once again it was being put about that all the animals were
dying of famine and disease, and that they were continually fighting among
themselves and had resorted to cannibalism and infanticide. Napoleon was well
aware of the bad results that might follow if the real facts of the food
situation were known, and he decided to make use of Mr. Whymper to spread a
contrary impression. Hitherto the animals had had little or no contact with
Whymper on his weekly visits: now, however, a few selected animals, mostly sheep,
were instructed to remark casually in his hearing that rations had been
increased. In addition, Napoleon ordered the almost empty bins in the store-shed
to be filled nearly to the brim with sand, which was then covered up with what
remained of the grain and meal. On some suitable pretext Whymper was led through
the store-shed and allowed to catch a glimpse of the bins. He was deceived, and
continued to report to the outside world that there was no food shortage on
Animal Farm.
Nevertheless, towards the end of January it became obvious that it would be
necessary to procure some more grain from somewhere. In these days Napoleon
rarely appeared in public, but spent all his time in the farmhouse, which was
guarded at each door by fierce-looking dogs. When he did emerge, it was in a
ceremonial manner, with an escort of six dogs who closely surrounded him and
growled if anyone came too near. Frequently he did not even appear on Sunday
mornings, but issued his orders through one of the other pigs, usually Squealer.
One Sunday morning Squealer announced that the hens, who had just come in to lay
again, must surrender their eggs. Napoleon had accepted, through Whymper, a
contract for four hundred eggs a week. The price of these would pay for enough
grain and meal to keep the farm going till summer came on and conditions were
easier.
When the hens heard this, they raised a terrible outcry. They had been warned
earlier that this sacrifice might be necessary, but had not believed that it
would really happen. They were just getting their clutches ready for the spring
sitting, and they protested that to take the eggs away now was murder. For the
first time since the expulsion of Jones, there was something resembling a
rebellion. Led by three young Black Minorca pullets, the hens made a determined
effort to thwart Napoleon's wishes. Their method was to fly up to the rafters
and there lay their eggs, which smashed to pieces on the floor. Napoleon acted
swiftly and ruthlessly. He ordered the hens' rations to be stopped, and decreed
that any animal giving so much as a grain of corn to a hen should be punished by
death. The dogs saw to it that these orders were carried out. For five days the
hens held out, then they capitulated and went back to their nesting boxes. Nine
hens had died in the meantime. Their bodies were buried in the orchard, and it
was given out that they had died of coccidiosis. Whymper heard nothing of this
affair, and the eggs were duly delivered, a grocer's van driving up to the farm
once a week to take them away.
All this while no more had been seen of Snowball. He was rumoured to be hiding
on one of the neighbouring farms, either Foxwood or Pinchfield. Napoleon was by
this time on slightly better terms with the other farmers than before. It
happened that there was in the yard a pile of timber which had been stacked
there ten years earlier when a beech spinney was cleared. It was well seasoned,
and Whymper had advised Napoleon to sell it; both Mr. Pilkington and Mr.
Frederick were anxious to buy it. Napoleon was hesitating between the two,
unable to make up his mind. It was noticed that whenever he seemed on the point
of coming to an agreement with Frederick, Snowball was declared to be in hiding
at Foxwood, while, when he inclined toward Pilkington, Snowball was said to be
at Pinchfield.
Suddenly, early in the spring, an alarming thing was discovered. Snowball was
secretly frequenting the farm by night! The animals were so disturbed that they
could hardly sleep in their stalls. Every night, it was said, he came creeping
in under cover of darkness and performed all kinds of mischief. He stole the
corn, he upset the milk-pails, he broke the eggs, he trampled the seedbeds, he
gnawed the bark off the fruit trees. Whenever anything went wrong it became
usual to attribute it to Snowball. If a window was broken or a drain was blocked
up, someone was certain to say that Snowball had come in the night and done it,
and when the key of the store-shed was lost, the whole farm was convinced that
Snowball had thrown it down the well. Curiously enough, they went on believing
this even after the mislaid key was found under a sack of meal. The cows
declared unanimously that Snowball crept into their stalls and milked them in
their sleep. The rats, which had been troublesome that winter, were also said to
be in league with Snowball.
Napoleon decreed that there should be a full investigation into Snowball's
activities. With his dogs in attendance he set out and made a careful tour of
inspection of the farm buildings, the other animals following at a respectful
distance. At every few steps Napoleon stopped and snuffed the ground for traces
of Snowball's footsteps, which, he said, he could detect by the smell. He
snuffed in every corner, in the barn, in the cow-shed, in the henhouses, in the
vegetable garden, and found traces of Snowball almost everywhere. He would put
his snout to the ground, give several deep sniffs, ad exclaim in a terrible
voice, "Snowball! He has been here! I can smell him distinctly!" and at the word
"Snowball" all the dogs let out blood-curdling growls and showed their side
teeth.
The animals were thoroughly frightened. It seemed to them as though Snowball
were some kind of invisible influence, pervading the air about them and menacing
them with all kinds of dangers. In the evening Squealer called them together,
and with an alarmed expression on his face told them that he had some serious
news to report.
"Comrades!" cried Squealer, making little nervous skips, "a most terrible thing
has been discovered. Snowball has sold himself to Frederick of Pinchfield Farm,
who is even now plotting to attack us and take our farm away from us! Snowball
is to act as his guide when the attack begins. But there is worse than that. We
had thought that Snowball's rebellion was caused simply by his vanity and
ambition. But we were wrong, comrades. Do you know what the real reason was?
Snowball was in league with Jones from the very start! He was Jones's secret
agent all the time. It has all been proved by documents which he left behind him
and which we have only just discovered. To my mind this explains a great deal,
comrades. Did we not see for ourselves how he attempted-fortunately without
success-to get us defeated and destroyed at the Battle of the Cowshed?"
The animals were stupefied. This was a wickedness far outdoing Snowball's
destruction of the windmill. But it was some minutes before they could fully
take it in. They all remembered, or thought they remembered, how they had seen
Snowball charging ahead of them at the Battle of the Cowshed, how he had rallied
and encouraged them at every turn, and how he had not paused for an instant even
when the pellets from Jones's gun had wounded his back. At first it was a little
difficult to see how this fitted in with his being on Jones's side. Even Boxer,
who seldom asked questions, was puzzled. He lay down, tucked his fore hoofs
beneath him, shut his eyes, and with a hard effort managed to formulate his
thoughts.
"I do not believe that," he said. "Snowball fought bravely at the Battle of the
Cowshed. I saw him myself. Did we not give him 'Animal Hero, first Class,'
immediately afterwards?"
"That was our mistake, comrade. For we know now-it is all written down in the
secret documents that we have found-that in reality he was trying to lure us to
our doom."
"But he was wounded," said Boxer. "We all saw him running with blood."
"That was part of the arrangement!" cried Squealer. "Jones's shot only grazed
him. I could show you this in his own writing, if you were able to read it. The
plot was for Snowball, at the critical moment, to give the signal for flight and
leave the field to the enemy. And he very nearly succeeded-I will even say,
comrades, he would have succeeded if it had not been for our heroic Leader,
Comrade Napoleon. Do you not remember how, just at the moment when Jones and his
men had got inside the yard, Snowball suddenly turned and fled, and many animals
followed him? And do you not remember, too, that it was just at that moment,
when panic was spreading and all seemed lost, that Comrade Napoleon sprang
forward with a cry of 'Death to Humanity!' and sank his teeth in Jones's leg?
Surely you remember that, comrades?" exclaimed Squealer, frisking from side to
side.
Now when Squealer described the scene so graphically, it seemed to the animals
that they did remember it. At any rate, they remembered that at the critical
moment of the battle Snowball had turned to flee. But Boxer was still a little
uneasy.
"I do not believe that Snowball was a traitor at the beginning," he said finally.
"What he has done since is different. But I believe that at the Battle of the
Cowshed he was a good comrade."
"Our Leader, Comrade Napoleon," announced Squealer, speaking very slowly and
firmly, "has stated categorically-categorically, comrade-that Snowball was
Jones's agent from the very beginning-yes, and from long before the Rebellion
was ever thought of."
"Ah, that is different!" said Boxer. "If Comrade Napoleon says it, it must be
right."
"That is the true spirit, comrade!" cried Squealer, but it was noticed he cast a
very ugly look at Boxer with his little twinkling eyes. He turned to go, then
paused and added impressively: "I warn every animal on this farm to keep his
eyes very wide open. For we have reason to think that some of Snowball's secret
agents are lurking among us at this moment! "
Four days later, in the late afternoon, Napoleon ordered all the animals to
assemble in the yard. When they were all gathered together, Napoleon emerged
from the farmhouse, wearing both his medals (for he had recently awarded himself
"Animal Hero, First Class," and "Animal Hero, Second Class"), with his nine huge
dogs frisking round him and uttering growls that sent shivers down all the
animals' spines. They all cowered silently in their places, seeming to know in
advance that some terrible thing was about to happen.
Napoleon stood sternly surveying his audience; then he uttered a high-pitched
whimper. Immediately the dogs bounded forward, seized four of the pigs by the
ear and dragged them, squealing with pain and terror, to Napoleon's feet. The
pigs' ears were bleeding, the dogs had tasted blood, and for a few moments they
appeared to go quite mad. To the amazement of everybody, three of them flung
themselves upon Boxer. Boxer saw them coming and put out his great hoof, caught
a dog in mid-air, and pinned him to the ground. The dog shrieked for mercy and
the other two fled with their tails between their legs. Boxer looked at Napoleon
to know whether he should crush the dog to death or let it go. Napoleon appeared
to change countenance, and sharply ordered Boxer to let the dog go, whereat
Boxer lifted his hoof, and the dog slunk away, bruised and howling.
Presently the tumult died down. The four pigs waited, trembling, with guilt
written on every line of their countenances. Napoleon now called upon them to
confess their crimes. They were the same four pigs as had protested when
Napoleon abolished the Sunday Meetings. Without any further prompting they
confessed that they had been secretly in touch with Snowball ever since his
expulsion, that they had collaborated with him in destroying the windmill, and
that they had entered into an agreement with him to hand over Animal Farm to Mr.
Frederick. They added that Snowball had privately admitted to them that he had
been Jones's secret agent for years past. When they had finished their
confession, the dogs promptly tore their throats out, and in a terrible voice
Napoleon demanded whether any other animal had anything to confess.
The three hens who had been the ringleaders in the attempted rebellion over the
eggs now came forward and stated that Snowball had appeared to them in a dream
and incited them to disobey Napoleon's orders. They, too, were slaughtered. Then
a goose came forward and confessed to having secreted six ears of corn during
the last year's harvest and eaten them in the night. Then a sheep confessed to
having urinated in the drinking pool-urged to do this, so she said, by Snowball-and
two other sheep confessed to having murdered an old ram, an especially devoted
follower of Napoleon, by chasing him round and round a bonfire when he was
suffering from a cough. They were all slain on the spot. And so the tale of
confessions and executions went on, until there was a pile of corpses lying
before Napoleon's feet and the air was heavy with the smell of blood, which had
been unknown there since the expulsion of Jones.
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. Not even a
rat had been killed. They had made their way on to the little knoll where the
half-finished windmill stood, and with one accord they all lay down as though
huddling together for warmth-Clover, Muriel, Benjamin, the cows, the sheep, and
a whole flock of geese and hens-everyone, indeed, except the cat, who had
suddenly disappeared just before Napoleon ordered the animals to assemble. For
some time nobody spoke. Only Boxer remained on his feet. He fidgeted to and fro,
swishing his long black tail against his sides and occasionally uttering a
little whinny of surprise. Finally he said:
"I do not understand it. I would not have believed that such things could happen
on our farm. It must be due to some fault in ourselves. The solution, as I see
it, is to work harder. From now onwards I shall get up a full hour earlier in
the mornings."
And he moved off at his lumbering trot and made for the quarry. Having got there,
he collected two successive loads of stone and dragged them down to the windmill
before retiring for the night.
The animals huddled about Clover, not speaking. The knoll where they were lying
gave them a wide prospect across the countryside. Most of Animal Farm was within
their view-the long pasture stretching down to the main road, the hayfield, the
spinney, the drinking pool, the ploughed fields where the young wheat was thick
and green, and the red roofs of the farm buildings with the smoke curling from
the chimneys. It was a clear spring evening. The grass and the bursting hedges
were gilded by the level rays of the sun. Never had the farm-and with a kind of
surprise they remembered that it was their own farm, every inch of it their own
property-appeared to the animals so desirable a place. As Clover looked down the
hillside her eyes filled with tears. If she could have spoken her thoughts, it
would have been to say that this was not what they had aimed at when they had
set themselves years ago to work for the overthrow of the human race. These
scenes of terror and slaughter were not what they had looked forward to on that
night when old Major first stirred them to rebellion. If she herself had had any
picture of the future, it had been of a society of animals set free from hunger
and the whip, all equal, each working according to his capacity, the strong
protecting the weak, as she had protected the lost brood of ducklings with her
foreleg on the night of Major's speech. Instead-she did not know why-they had
come to a time when no one dared speak his mind, when fierce, growling dogs
roamed everywhere, and when you had to watch your comrades torn to pieces after
confessing to shocking crimes. There was no thought of rebellion or disobedience
in her mind. She knew that, even as things were, they were far better off than
they had been in the days of Jones, and that before all else it was needful to
prevent the return of the human beings. Whatever happened she would remain
faithful, work hard, carry out the orders that were given to her, and accept the
leadership of Napoleon. But still, it was not for this that she and all the
other animals had hoped and toiled. It was not for this that they had built the
windmill and faced the bullets of Jones's gun. Such were her thoughts, though
she lacked the words to express them.
At last, feeling this to be in some way a substitute for the words she was
unable to find, she began to sing Beasts of England. The other animals sitting
round her took it up, and they sang it three times over-very tunefully, but
slowly and mournfully, in a way they had never sung it before.
They had just finished singing it for the third time when Squealer, attended by
two dogs, approached them with the air of having something important to say. He
announced that, by a special decree of Comrade Napoleon, Beasts of England had
been abolished. From now onwards it was forbidden to sing it.
The animals were taken aback.
"Why?" cried Muriel.
"It's no longer needed, comrade," said Squealer stiffly. "Beasts of England was
the song of the Rebellion. But the Rebellion is now completed. The execution of
the traitors this afternoon was the final act. The enemy both external and
internal has been defeated. In Beasts of England we expressed our longing for a
better society in days to come. But that society has now been established.
Clearly this song has no longer any purpose."
Frightened though they were, some of the animals might possibly have protested,
but at this moment the sheep set up their usual bleating of "Four legs good, two
legs bad," which went on for several minutes and put an end to the discussion.
So Beasts of England was heard no more. In its place Minimus, the poet, had
composed another song which began:
Animal Farm, Animal Farm,
Never through me shalt thou come to harm!
and this was sung every Sunday morning after the hoisting of the flag. But
somehow neither the words nor the tune ever seemed to the animals to come up to
Beasts of England.