All she really says is foolish things. She asks "Will there be sugar after the rebellion?". She also asks "Will I get to wear my ribbons after the rebellion?". She is simply being her foolish and conceited self.
Mollie
The book doesn't speak of the horse Mollie's background. Mollie does, however, leave the farm because she desires the material things humans offer her such as ribbons and sugar cubes.
Mollie in Animal Farm is vain, superficial, and self-centered. She is more concerned with her own comfort and luxury than the principles of equality and hard work that the other animals advocate for on the farm. She represents those individuals who prioritize personal indulgence over the greater good of society.
The novel, Animal Farm, was intended to satirize the Bolshevik Revolution, not modern society. Mollie represented the spoiled Russian aristocracy that, although supportive of Trotsky and Stalin to some extent at the onset of communism in the Soviet Union, soon became nostalgic for their former glory and finances, and fled to other countries. In the book, this is represented by Mollie first hiding ribbons in her stall and later taking sugar cubes from and fleeing with one of the neighboring farmers.
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Animal farm
"Animal Farm" by George Orwell was published in London.
Animal farm the book represents the Russian 1917 revolution. The animals represent russians. The farm represents Russia.
Snowball and Napoleon always disagree in the book animal farm
The goat
Animal Farm
Animal Farm is a book by George Orwell. The themes of the book are directed at an adult audience. However, it is presented like a children's story.