What do the pigs hold in their trotters in Chapter Ten?

What do the pigs hold in their trotters in Chapter Ten?

He carried a whip in his trotter. “Four legs good, two legs better! Four legs good, two legs better! Four legs good, two legs better!”

What do the pigs suddenly start carrying in their trotters?

Soon after they come back, the pigs suddenly come out of the farmhouse walking on their hind legs, Squealer in the front and then all of them in a long file. Finally Napoleon emerges, also walking on his hind legs and carrying a whip in his trotter. All the pigs start carrying whips, and wearing clothes.

What does Napoleon carry in his trotter?

Napoleon’s carrying a whip in his trotter — formerly a symbol of human torture — and dressing in Jones’ clothes only cements in readers minds what they have long suspected.

What do the pigs carry in Animal Farm?

whips
Many of the animals who participated in the rebellion are dead or old. Mr. Jones is also dead, saying he “died in an inebriates’ home in another part of the country”. The pigs start to resemble humans, as they walk upright, carry whips, drink alcohol, and wear clothes.

Why are the sheep taught the chant Four legs good two legs better?

Over time, the power of the pigs grows. They eventually learn to walk on two legs, mirroring the humans that used to control the farm before the revolution. Teaching the sheep the new chant of “Four Legs Good, Two Legs Better” is another reminder of how the sheep are used to consolidate the pig power over the farm.

What do the animals see when they look in the farmhouse window?

Napoleon sent him to the butcher instead of the hospital. The animals on the farm worked hard. What did the other animals see when they looked into the farmhouse? They saw that the pigs were in an alliance with the humans, a fight broke out over a card game and they couldn’t tell pigs from humans.

What is the new sheep chant?

Four legs good, two legs better
Before the other animals have a chance to react to the change, the sheep begin to chant, as if on cue: “Four legs good, two legs better!” Clover, whose eyes are failing in her old age, asks Benjamin to read the writing on the barn wall where the Seven Commandments were originally inscribed.