Boxer | |
---|---|
First appearance | Animal Farm |
Last appearance | Animal Farm (Only Appearance) |
Created by | George Orwell |
Voiced by |
Maurice Denham (1954 film) Paul Scofield (1999 film) |
Information | |
Species | Horse |
Gender | Male |
Occupation | Labourer at Animal Farm |
Boxer is described as a hardworking, but naive and ignorant horse in George Orwell's Animal Farm. He is shown as the farm's most dedicated and loyal labourer as well. Boxer serves as an allegory for the Russian working-class who helped to oust Tsar Nicholas and establish the Soviet Union, but were eventually betrayed by the Stalinists.
Boxer is also caring and looks out for the other animals; for example, when they are hungry he makes sure that they get food . He could also be found in the places where the animals are having difficulty in carrying out their jobs. He does all their works loyally and faithfully. Boxer has various mottoes that define his personality, such as: "Napoleon is always right." and "I will work harder." : He has been described as "faithful and strong"; he believes any problem can be solved if he works harder.
Boxer is a bit dim-witted and can only remember four letters of the alphabet at a time, but sees the importance of education and aspires to learn the rest of the alphabet during retirement (which never happens). Boxer is a loyal supporter of Napoleon; he listens to everything the self-appointed ruler of the farm says and assumes, sometimes with doubt, that everything Napoleon tells the farm animals is true: "Napoleon is always right."
Boxers' strength plays a huge part in keeping the Farm together prior to his death: the rest of the animals trusted in it to keep their spirits high during the long and hard laborious winters. Boxer was the only close friend of Benjamin, the cynical donkey.
Boxer fights in the Battle of the Cowshed and the Battle of the Windmill, but is upset when he thinks he has killed a stable boy when, in fact, he had only stunned him. When Boxer defends Snowball's reputation from Squealer's revisionism, the pigs designate him as a target for the Great Purge, but he easily out muscles the dog executioners, sparing them at Napoleon's request. His death shows how far the pigs are willing to go. When he collapses from overwork, the pigs say they have sent him to a veterinarian, when they actually have sent him to the knacker's yard to be slaughtered, in exchange for money to buy a case of whiskey for the pigs to enjoy.