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While Napoleon and Snowball dominate the novel's power struggle, the supporting characters are essential to understanding Animal Farm's themes. Each character represents a different section of society and serves a specific dramatic and allegorical function. Understanding their roles — and how they relate to the pigs — is key to a sophisticated GCSE response.
OLD MAJOR
/ \
inspires inspires
/ \
SNOWBALL ----rival---- NAPOLEON
|
controls
|
SQUEALER --- THE DOGS
(propaganda) (violence)
|
manipulates
|
BOXER --- CLOVER --- BENJAMIN --- SHEEP
(loyal) (caring) (cynical) (mindless)
Boxer is an enormous carthorse, admired for his strength and dedication. He represents the exploited working class — loyal, hardworking, and trusting to the point of self-destruction.
| Motto | What it reveals |
|---|---|
| "I will work harder" | Blind dedication — he responds to every problem with more labour |
| "Napoleon is always right" | Unquestioning loyalty to authority — he surrenders his critical thinking |
| Stage | What happens | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Early chapters | Works harder than any other animal; respected by all | Embodies the ideals of the revolution |
| Mid-chapters | Adopts "Napoleon is always right" after Snowball's expulsion | Shows how the loyal are manipulated |
| Chapter 7 | Resists the dogs when they attack him, then releases them when Napoleon commands | His strength could challenge Napoleon, but his loyalty prevents it |
| Chapter 9 | Collapses from overwork; is sold to the knacker | Betrayed by the system he served |
Examiner's tip: Boxer's fate is the novel's most emotionally devastating moment. He is sent to the slaughterhouse by the leader he worshipped. Orwell uses Boxer to argue that blind loyalty to authority — no matter how well-intentioned — ultimately enables exploitation. His mottoes are tragic because they combine genuine virtue (hard work) with fatal naivety (unquestioning obedience).
Squealer is a small, fat porker with round cheeks and twinkling eyes. He is described as being able to "turn black into white" — his function is to manipulate language to justify Napoleon's actions.
| Technique | Example | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Appeal to fear | "Surely, comrades, you do not want Jones back?" | Silences criticism through fear |
| False statistics | Claims food production has increased by 200-300% | Contradicts the animals' own experience |
| Rewriting history | Claims Snowball was a traitor from the start | Destroys trust in alternative leaders |
| Altering the Commandments | Adds "with sheets", "to excess", "without cause" | Enables rule-breaking while maintaining the appearance of legality |
| Emotional manipulation | "Surely there is no one among you who wants to see Jones come back?" | Exploits the animals' deepest fear |
| Circular logic | The pigs need apples because they do brainwork; they do brainwork because they are pigs | Makes exploitation seem natural and inevitable |
Examiner's tip: Squealer represents the entire propaganda apparatus of a totalitarian state — newspapers, radio, state media. Orwell shows that propaganda works not because people are stupid, but because it exploits their fears, confuses their memories, and gives them comforting explanations for uncomfortable realities.
Clover is a stout, motherly mare who cares for the other animals. She represents the decent, ordinary person who senses something is wrong but lacks the education or confidence to challenge the powerful.
After the show trials and executions, Clover looks out over the farm:
"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... Instead — she did not know why — they had come to a time when no one dared speak his mind."
This passage is devastating because Clover understands that the revolution has been betrayed, but she cannot articulate why or how. She would have challenged the pigs "if she could have found the right words." Her inability to translate her instincts into action represents the tragedy of the inarticulate masses.
Benjamin is an old donkey who never changes his expression and never laughs. He is the only animal who can read as well as the pigs, but he refuses to use this ability to help the others.
"Donkeys live a long time. None of you has ever seen a dead donkey."
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