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A few days after a book on Animal Farm

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A few days after a book on Animal Farm

Orwell is a phenomenon, not a beginning, not an end.

His Animal Farm is an adult fairy tale;

It is very helpful for understanding the left and right wings of the first half of the twentieth century, and it is also very helpful for understanding the left and right wings of the present.

Before the text begins, allow me to tell you about the characters that appear in the story so that you can better understand them.

Let's start with humans.

Mr. Jones, owner of the Manor Farm.

A few days after a book on Animal Farm

He drank all day, was drunk, and neglected to manage his workers.

They milked cows without feeding the grass, causing trouble for the cows. The other animals responded and drove Jones away.

So Jones was forced into exile and spent all day in bars.

His exiled city was called Wellington, the center of human habitation, when referring to London.

There's a Red Lion Street in London.

Jones lost his farm, never reconciled, colluded with Friedrick and Pyrkington (more on that later), attacked Animal Farm, unsuccessfully, and finally died in a drunken shelter.

Russians have a tendency to drink heavily.

The author portrays him as an alcoholic, using him as a symbol of the Tsarist rulers overthrown by the October Revolution.

But this man was by no means a Russian emperor, but a White Russian.

Because Nicholas II was executed by the Bolsheviks, not drunk, after all, the revolutionary crowd was indignant and sent to the guillotine of the tyrant, which was a European tradition.

A few days after a book on Animal Farm

The second is Mr. Friedrich,

The owner of the narrow farms refers to Hitler.

His characteristics are "shrewd and strong, and he has been fighting lawsuits with others for many months as an adult" and "he is preoccupied with things and refuses to eat any losses."

The name Pinchfeld literally means squeezed land.

In the First World War, Germany was a defeated country, with land reparations and territory squeezed.

The original book says it 'is small in size, but it is better managed'. Frederick is a German surname, known in German as Friederioh.

Friedrich II of Prussia (or 'Friedrich the Great', Frederick the Great') had this surname.

Friedrich II was the most famous Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire (First Reich) and Hitler was the Führer of the Greater German Reich (Third Reich). He presented himself as the successor of the First Empire, so there is this analogy.

The third is Mr. Pilkington, the owner of the sniper farm. Pilkington is a British surname.

Foxwood Pilkton is a fox-infested wild woods. The British love fox hunting.

According to the original book, it was "a large, poorly run old farm, covered with clumps of small trees, barren pastures, and crooked hedges," referring to the colonial system represented by the British Empire.

Who is this person referring to?

Some say it's Churchill and Roosevelt, I think it's Churchill.

Roosevelt's country was not like a "poorly run old farm."

The original book says, "Neither Pilkington nor Friedrich looked down on each other" but feared the "animal revolution."

They were a gang, but there were contradictions.

The fourth is Mr. Winper (M:. Whymper), a lawyer who lives in Wellington.

He is Napoleon (detailed next part, dot wave attention waiting for update)

After the implementation of the New Economic Policy at Animal Farm, the first broker to broker animal farms and human farms to broker their trade was the American entrepreneur Hammer.

In 1921, he went to the Soviet Union to provide relief to disaster victims, and later opened a pencil factory in the Soviet Union. In 1930, he returned to the United States and bought a large number of precious paintings from the Soviet Union.

These four "people",

Jones is a sack of rice bags old waste

Friedrick and Pilkington aren't good either. None of them are heroes or positive characters in the story.

In the next article, we will introduce animals.