Chapter Breaks | Animal Farm – George Orwell | Chapter I, Beginning of Chapter 2 | Old Major’s Dream
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About this listen
📖 A relaxing read aloud audiobook excerpt — ideal for unwinding, walking, studying, or resting.
🎧 A quietly powerful, unsettling read aloud from George Orwell’s Animal Farm — where a midnight gathering becomes the birth of an idea, and a dream begins to harden into doctrine.
Perfect for listeners who enjoy political allegory, deceptively simple classics, and stories where ideals are forged long before their consequences are known.🎧 Audiobook Excerpt from George Orwell’s Animal Farm. Read by Chapter Breaks – Short Literary Escapes. Classic audio pills for your commute, bedtime unwind, or a break anytime. At Chapter Breaks, we carefully select and curate iconic passages from classic novels — timeless opening chapters, dramatic turning points, or foundational moments. Each episode is around 20–30 minutes, designed to let you dip into great literature without the commitment of a full audiobook. George Orwell – Animal Farm – Chapter I, Beginning of Chapter II | Old Major’s Dream. A vision is spoken — and a revolution quietly begins. George Orwell’s Animal Farm is a masterful political fable that uses the language of animals to reveal the mechanics of power, persuasion, and collective belief. Beneath its plain style lies a sharp meditation on how injustice is explained, how loyalty is shaped, and how revolutions are born not in action, but in words. In this opening sequence, the drunken farmer Mr. Jones stumbles off to bed, and the animals of Manor Farm gather secretly in the barn. They come to hear Old Major, an aged boar nearing the end of his life, share the wisdom of a long night’s dream. Calm, commanding, and deeply persuasive, Major describes the animals’ shared existence as one of labour, deprivation, and slaughter — lives sustained only to serve human profit. As his speech unfolds, suffering is given a single cause and a single enemy: Man. Old Major reframes hardship as theft, obedience as slavery, and endurance as something no longer inevitable. With simple logic and stirring rhetoric, he transforms private misery into collective injustice, urging unity, vigilance, and rebellion — not tomorrow, but someday certain. The moment culminates in song. Beasts of England, resurrected from memory, sweeps through the barn as a hymn of freedom, abundance, and a future without masters. Sung again and again in mounting excitement, it binds the animals together not through reason alone, but through emotion, rhythm, and shared longing. The extract closes as Old Major dies peacefully and his words pass into the hands of others. In the early days that follow, his dream begins to take shape — organised, repeated, and simplified — marking the quiet transition from vision to ideology. We are about to step into that lantern-lit barn — to hear a dream spoken into the darkness, and to witness the moment when hope first learns to speak in rules. Let’s open the page together; your chapter break begins now.
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Music and visuals are in the public domain or licensed via Pictory – full licence available on their website.