Power in George Orwell´s Animal Farm

609 Words2 Pages

How did the pigs’ rise to power affect the other characters in the story?

In George Orwell's sattire Animal Farm, one can see how the pigs’ rise to power affect the other characters in the story in that it affected their health, economic system, and rights. The first way that the pigs’ rise to power affect the other characters in the story in that it affected their health. The farm animals lived to work, and the work seemed worse now than it did when the humans were around. As the author explains that, “they were generally hugry, they slept on straw, they drank from the pool, they laboured in the fields; in the winter they were troubled by cold, and in the summer by flies” (Orwell, Animal Farm, 130). Thus, the farm animal's health had actually gotten worse since the pigs had been in charged. The second way that the pigs’ rise to power affect the other characters in the story in that it affected their work conditions. This is demonstrated from the begining because the labour was ment for humans and not for farm animals. In addition to farm labour they also had added labour in...

Open Document