I have a few people I
know who teach or have taught English literature and I know for sure that
either of them would shriek at me if they heard what I was up to this past
August School holiday. Well I had very limited options to dodge the kind of
misdemeanor I was up to.
To cut the long story
short, it turns out that I have a niece in her grade 11 and it’s always a
pleasure to have her at my home during the school holiday. Every time she is at
my home, she will ask me question about current affairs and I will give her
answers from my fingertips. It seems this has given her the impression that her
uncle is ‘extremely knowledgeable’. First it was an arithmetic question and
luckily I was able to solve the question with relative ease. Being the uncle
who at times is fond of a little bit of some show off to his nieces and
nephews, I went further to illustrate and give her tips on that particular
topic. That was the biggest mistake.
Accordingly, one day she
comes to where I was sitting and starts to ask me questions about Animal farm
the 1950’s political satire novel by George Orwell. She mentions the book is
part of their English literature syllabus. I have read the book a couple of
times, but not recently. As a matter of fact I first read the book when I was
probably in my sixth or seventh grade. The most unfortunate thing is that I
never took English literature as a subject at school. I have no clue what
teachers expect of students from these books.
I actually first read
Animal farm earlier than most blokes do because reading books was all I did
once I learned how to read. It is the shitty thing about growing up in a home
with book shelves full of different kinds of books all the time. This was the
shitty thing about reading the wrong books at a young age – I never
understood ‘jack’ about what the literature was all about. I’d be done reading
Animal farm and start reading another book – that would have been Mine Boy,
The
imprisonment of Obatala, Weep not, child or any other book.
There were times I’d be at home on a weekend and reading the Quran. Not that I
have complaints about this.
So when my niece asked
me to give her a narrative of Animal farm, I wasn’t going to admit that I knew very
little in the context of the English in Literature syllabus. This is what my
friends who teach or have taught English literature would even slap me for.
Here is my failed
attempt to expound Animal farm;
I think Squealer has
fallen out with Napoleon. He has not
been heard from much recently. With the massive depreciation of the Farm currency
and all the electricity power deficits the farm is experiencing, I expected the
chief propagandist to give the animals explanations, statements and just
generally hope that the Pigs Forum
is in charge and on top of things. Who else would be better placed to give hope
to boxer and clover not to give up but work even harder? Of course it’s Squealer. It’s only Squealer who can make Boxer say that ‘Napoleon is always right’ and ‘I will work harder’, even with the
current general despondency among the animals.
Alas, it is Vincent who
has been giving statements as acting propagandist. The other day it was Amos who gave statements during an appearance
on the weekend interview. I actually thought Squealer had traveled out of the farm. What could be the
explanation of Amos addressing the
farm animals in the capacity of chief propagandist? I also don’t see it fit for
Vincent to take up the role of
acting chief propagandist when Squealer
is well and alive. It definitely defies the laws of animalism and of course
very much against protocol and etiquette.
You see, things haven’t really been the same since Mr Jones lost control of the farm. The
Animals had celebrated after the rebellion was successful in anticipation of a
more prosperous farm. The prosperity of the farm was all in Old Major’s dream which he had shared
with all the animals. It was a dream of lower taxes, more food rations (or more
money in pockets if it were humans), a new animal driven constitution within 90
days of the rebellion, a new but better pension policy, no tax on pension, and
so many more. However Old Major died
before his entire dream was achieved. In no time, Snowball who had taken the initiative of interpreting and
explaining the socialist dream of Old Major
was expelled from the farm.
Later on, Squealer as
the chief propagandist held a press conference at which he explained to the
animals that Snowball had all along
been a traitor. In fact, even before the rebellion at the time Mr Jones spent his time drinking whisky
all the time in his quarters, Snowball
was enlisted as a super spy to be giving information to Mr Jones. Snowball had
in fact worked against the rebellion and that the recognition of state counsel for
his alleged contribution during campaigns and the battle of the cowshed which he got would be reviewed and
possibly withdrawn. Squealer also
accused Snowball for the death of Old Major. How else would you explain Snowball campaigning to be leader soon
after the rebellion when there was no vacancy?
Why did Snowball take
it upon himself to start teaching the other animals how to read and write? What
followed was that Squealer blamed everything that went wrong on the farm on Snowball. In addition, Squealer had made it a point to paint
neighbouring farmers Pilkington and Fredrick in bad light. All the animals
were told not to ever have dealings with Pilkington
especially. Squealer had done his
task very well. Even when the hens
had dared to revolt and called a meeting they termed Chuundu chaitwa where they would discuss a plan to protest against
the rule of the pigs by breaking reared eggs and not producing any eggs at all,
Squealer had quickly addressed the
animals and sternly warned the hens that
they would be dealt with by the heavy arm of Napoleon’s law. Napoleon’s
dogs were consequently put on alert and sent to ruffle the hens. Jessie and
bluebell had immediately barked for five minutes as a warning and the hens were
later starved into submission.
The hens were consequently accused of trying to secede from Animal
farm and trying to create a birds’ farm. The hens were accused of promoting
regionalism instead of animalism. Squealer
had immediately rushed to the sheep
and made them recite the slogan; four
legs good, two legs bad. When the hens had tried to complain that the
slogan discriminated against them, Squealer
had explained that only two legs without feathers were bad. Although they
didn’t voice it out (they couldn’t voice out or the dogs would be upon them for
breaking the animal farm law), the chickens certainly knew that since the
‘feathers’ part was never mentioned or written anywhere, this was definitely a
discriminatory slogan.
You see up until then, Squealer
had done a pretty good job as the chief propagandist. I really suspect he has
fallen out with Napoleon no wonder
he has been pushed out of the limelight. That is possible as napoleon could
consider sleek squealer a threat. Of-course
Squealer had challenged Napoleon for the leadership of animal
farm shortly after the death of Old Major.
This is reason enough to suggest that Squealer
is a threat to Napoleon. Like Snowball I don’t see him sticking
around for long.
Sidelined or not Squealer
has a lot of problems to contend with now that Pilkington has stopped buying as much wood as before. The price of
wood has really dropped to the lowest level hence the farm is not having any
foreign currency. The biggest underground mine of wood is in Squealers constituency and he is
finding it tough to explain to the rest of the animals and his fellow swine
that the animals will have their daily food rations amid the current economic atmosphere
and low wood price coupled with the low corn yield the previous farming season.
To put this problem into perspective, 4,000 animals at More-panny wood mine will be laid off,
1,600 more animals have also been sent on forced unpaid leave at Bar-Loo-Bar wood mine. These are enough
problems to send a pig on sabbatical. But Squealer
is not the type of pig to be kept in the background and he has been speaking of
late again. He was on the weekend interview the other week where he blamed all
the problems of the farm on everybody but himself and the other pigs. He blamed
the electricity power deficit at the farm on Mr Jones for having failed to build the wind mill to power the
farm.
Snowball was specifically cited
in that highly charged interview for sabotaging the windmill project their by
causing the shortage of electricity on the farm. Squealer seems to be the best at accusing everyone else (especially
Snowball) but himself, for all the problems at the farm. Squealer has further been taking a swipe at the critics of Napoleon and the Pigs Forum telling them that they understood little or nothing
about farmnomics. He singled out one
professor SirSir for lacking
knowledge. These sentiments were later echoed by Amos, who told Napoleon’s
detractors to go and read farmnomics
again.
In fact Squealer has
been reiterating the point that no one should question Napoleon. Napoleon knows
best and Napoleon is always right. Napoleon doesn’t need to explain to the
other animals regarding the rising cost of survival on animal farm, or anything
for that matter. Napoleon knows best
and the sheep can sing and recite
that all day.
Hahahahahahaha...classic! Wrong books indeed. yaba, the sad truth. How we can allow ourselves to be played this cruel game of emperor's new clothes beats me. Squealer even denies reality when its staring him right in the snout or should I say face.
ReplyDeletePretty cool.
ReplyDelete---------------------------------------------------
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