In "Animal Farm," the original plans for the windmill undergo significant changes as the story progresses. Initially, the windmill is a symbol of hope and progress, intended to improve the animals' lives and productivity. However, after the pigs take control, the plans shift to serve their own interests, resulting in the windmill being built under harsh conditions and with little benefit to the other animals. Ultimately, the project becomes a tool for manipulation and exploitation rather than the communal goal it was originally intended to be.
That would be Snowball the pig
In George Orwell's "Animal Farm," the character that isn't enthusiastic about the windmill is Benjamin the donkey. He is skeptical and cynical about the plans for the windmill, believing that it will not improve their situation. Benjamin's lack of enthusiasm reflects his broader perspective on life, as he tends to view the events on the farm with a sense of fatalism and doubt about the effectiveness of the animals' efforts.
The windmill represents industrialization. In Animal Farm, the windmill is their progress, all the work that they had poured into. Boxer is the hardest worker in the project (he represents the peasants of Russia).
i lick cheese
dogs
They chase him from the farm.
a windmill
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snowball is blamed for the windmills
It was by a storm
The beginning of World War II.
battle cowshed, battle of windmill