A FEW days later, when the terror caused by the executions had died down, some of the animals
remembered−or thought they remembered−that the Sixth Commandment decreed "No animal shall
kill any other animal." And though no one cared to mention it in the hearing of the pigs or the dogs, it
was felt that the killings which had taken place did not square with this. Clover asked Benjamin to
read her the Sixth Commandment, and when Benjamin, as usual, said that he refused to meddle in
such matters, she fetched Muriel. Muriel read the Commandment for her. It ran: "No animal shall kill
any other animal without cause." Somehow or other, the last two words had slipped out of the
animals' memory. But they saw now that the Commandment had not been violated; for clearly there
was good reason for killing the traitors who had leagued themselves with Snowball.
Throughout the year the animals worked even harder than they had worked in the previous year To
rebuild the windmill, with walls twice as thick as before, and to finish it by the appointed date,
together with the regular work of the farm, was a tremendous labour. There were times when it
seemed to the animals that they worked longer hours and fed no better than they had done in Jones's
day. On Sunday mornings Squealer, holding down a long strip of paper with his trotter, would read
out to them lists of figures proving that the production of every class of foodstuff had increased by
two hundred per cent, three hundred per cent, or five hundred per cent, as the case might be. The
animals saw no reason to disbelieve him, especially as they could no longer remember very clearly
what conditions had been like before the Rebellion. All the same, there were days when they felt that
they would sooner have had less figures and more food.
All orders were now issued through Squealer or one of the other pigs. Napoleon himself was not seen
in public as often as once in a fortnight. When he did appear, he was attended not only by his retinue
of dogs but by a black cockerel who marched in front of him and acted as a kind of trumpeter, letting
out a loud "cock−a−doodle−doo" before Napoleon spoke. Even in the farmhouse, it was said,
Napoleon inhabited separate apartments from the others. He took his meals alone, with two dogs to
wait upon him, and always ate from the Crown Derby dinner service which had been in the glass
cupboard in the drawing−room. It was also announced that the gun would be fired every year on
Napoleon's birthday, as well as on the other two anniversaries.
Napoleon was now never spoken of simply as "Napoleon." He was always referred to in formal style
as "our Leader, Comrade Napoleon," and this pigs liked to invent for him such titles as Father of All
Animals, Terror of Mankind, Protector of the Sheep−fold, Ducklings' Friend, and the like. In his
speeches, Squealer would talk with the tears rolling down his cheeks of Napoleon's wisdom the
goodness of his heart, and the deep love he bore to all animals everywhere, even and especially the