Animal Farm - Character assessment of Napoleon, the pigs and the dogs.

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Napoleon: Napoleon is Orwell's chief villain in Animal Farm.  The name Napoleon is very coincidental since Napoleon, the dictator of France, was thought by many to be the Anti-Christ.  Napoleon, the pig, is really the central character on the farm.     Obviously a metaphor for Stalin, Comrade Napoleon represents the human frailties of any revolution.  Orwell believed that although socialism is good as an ideal, it can never be successfully adopted due to uncontrollable sins of human nature.    For example, although Napoleon seems as first to be a good leader, he is eventually overcome by greed and soon becomes power-hungry.  Of course Stalin did too in Russia, leaving the original equality of socialism behind, giving himself all the power and living in luxury while the common peasant suffered.  Thus, while his national and international status blossomed, the welfare of Russia remained unchanged.  Orwell explains, "Somehow it seemed as though the farm had grown richer without making the animals themselves any richer--except, of course for the pigs and the dogs."   
     The true side of Napoleon becomes evident after he slaughters so many animals for plotting against him.  He even hires a pig to sample his food for him to make certain that no one is trying to poison him.  Stalin, too, was a cruel dictator in Russia.  After suspecting many people in his empire to be supporters of Trotsky (Orwell's Snowball), Stalin systematically murders many.  
     By the end of the book, Napoleon doesn't even pretend to lead a socialist state.  After renaming it a Republic and instituting his own version of the commandments and the Beasts of England, Comrade Napoleon, he quickly becomes more or less a dictator who of course has never even been elected by the animals.  

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Pigs: Orwell uses the pigs to surround and support Napoleon.  They symbolize the communist party loyalists and the friends of Stalin.   The pigs, unlike other animals, live in luxury and enjoy the benefits of the society they help control.  The inequality and true hypocrisy of communism is expressed here by Orwell, who criticized Marx's oversimplified view of a socialist, "utopian" society.  Obviously George Orwell doesn't believe such a society can exist. 
    Toward the end of the book, Orwell emphasizes, "Somehow it seemed as though the farm had grown richer without making the animals themselves any richer— except, of course, ...

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