This Essay is about How the Last Sentence, In George Orwell's "Animal Farm", Relates to the Rest of the Book. This is about the irony in the story of how one being became what it hated.
Date Submitted: 02/19/2003 07:28:25
The last sentence in the book Animal Farm relates to the book in so many ways. First I must say that in the end the pigs became what they hate. The pigs slowly became just like Jones throughout the book. They even broke their own thought up commandments and changed them. They believed they were more important than all the rest of the animals on Animal Farm. Napoleon became the leader and worked the animals
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language, and meaningless doubletalk but also to manipulate history, and thus challenge the nature of actuality itself. This manipulation, however, is only one primary means of the pigs' control; another, equally important, is the threat of brute force as manifested by Napoleon's pack of vicious trained dogs. In the final image of the allegory, the realization is that humans prove to be no better than animals, and animals prove to be no better than humans.
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