1 Even the horses and the dogs have no better fate.
2 The dog shrieked for mercy and the other two fled with their tails between their legs.
3 Boxer looked at Napoleon to know whether he should crush the dog to death or let it go.
4 Boxer saw them coming and put out his great hoof, caught a dog in mid-air, and pinned him to the ground.
5 The cows lowed it, the dogs whined it, the sheep bleated it, the horses whinnied it, the ducks quacked it.
6 The dogs learned to read fairly well, but were not interested in reading anything except the Seven Commandments.
7 There were only four dissentients, the three dogs and the cat, who was afterwards discovered to have voted on both sides.
8 As for the dogs, when they grow old and toothless, Jones ties a brick round their necks and drowns them in the nearest pond.
9 The dogs had suddenly caught sight of them, and it was only by a swift dash for their holes that the rats saved their lives.
10 Napoleon then led them back to the store-shed and served out a double ration of corn to everybody, with two biscuits for each dog.
11 There was need of paraffin oil, nails, string, dog biscuits, and iron for the horses' shoes, none of which could be produced on the farm.
12 First came the three dogs, Bluebell, Jessie, and Pincher, and then the pigs, who settled down in the straw immediately in front of the platform.
13 Napoleon appeared to change countenance, and sharply ordered Boxer to let the dog go, whereat Boxer lifted his hoof, and the dog slunk away, bruised and howling.
14 Muriel, the goat, could read somewhat better than the dogs, and sometimes used to read to the others in the evenings from scraps of newspaper which she found on the rubbish heap.
15 There were songs, speeches, and more firing of the gun, and a special gift of an apple was bestowed on every animal, with two ounces of corn for each bird and three biscuits for each dog.
16 Even the stupidest of them had already picked up the tune and a few of the words, and as for the clever ones, such as the pigs and dogs, they had the entire song by heart within a few minutes.
17 He had flogged an old horse to death, he starved his cows, he had killed a dog by throwing it into the furnace, he amused himself in the evenings by making cocks fight with splinters of razor-blade tied to their spurs.
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