Los Mandamientos del Animalismo ... 7. Todos los Animales son Creados Igu
AUMENTO DE LA ACCIÓN
En la Granja, el Viejo Mayor, reúne a los animales para una reunión y los inspira a la rebelión. Aunque muere, dos cerdos, Napoleón y Bola de Nieve, juran continuar su trabajo, y conducir a los otros en la conducción del agricultor no apto, borracho. Los cerdos de la granja comienzan a establecer un nuevo gobierno donde los animales tienen derechos.
CLÍMAX
We will reach a treaty, I need you to help me transact business on behalf of Animal Farm in order to support the farm
Los animales comienzan a leer y escribir y tienen creencias. Los animales empiezan a leer y escribir. Ellos usan los mandamientos para educar a todos los jóvenes. La comida es abundante, y la granja funciona sin problemas. Sin embargo, cuando los cerdos se elevan a posiciones de liderazgo, comienza una lucha por el poder. Napoleón gana al tener sus perros persiguiendo la bola de nieve fuera de la granja.
.
Como líder supremo, Napoleón promulga cambios en el gobierno de la granja, reemplazando las reuniones de todos los animales con un comité de cerdos que dirigirá la granja. Eventualmente, la supremacía de Napoleón lo tiene paranoico que alguien tratará de derrocarlo.
RESOLUCIÓN
The other animals are "conscious with a vague uneasiness" because the Seven Commandments forbid trade with humans and the use of money. Napoleon assures the animals that at least they will not have to come into contact with humans. He has already made an agreement with a lawyer in town named Mr. Whymper, who will act as his go-between for the human world.
The animals work sixty-hour weeks during the spring and summer to build the windmill, but none of them complain about the extra labor. In August, Napoleon institutes "strictly voluntary" work for Sundays: the animals can choose not to come, but their rations will be cut in half.
I am exhausted from working all day and night to make the mill, I know that it is for the benefit of us animals.
Their work will now be "strictly voluntary", but they will cut their rations in half.
The shortage begins to occur. The animals require things, like iron for horseshoes and machinery for the windmill, that they cannot produce on the farm. Offering a solution, Napoleon opens up trade with neighboring farms and says that the animals may need to sell some of the eggs from the chickens in the nearby town of Willingdon. He makes sure to emphasize the fact that the windmill should be the animals' first priority.
We no longer have enough materials to be able to continue with the construction of the mill and we also need machinery