George Orwell wrote Animal Farm as an allegory about the evils of the Russian Revolution. The universal message of George Orwell's "Animal Farm" is that all violent revolutions which aim to and initially succeed in overthrowing repressive totalitarian regimes, after a brief idealistic period rapidly deteriorate into totalitarian and repressive
regimes themselves. There are three specific tactics of propaganda devices which are fear, deceit, and isolationism. According to this passage, the best option that highlights the allegory for totalitarian propaganda is the fourth option: “<em>The animals do not complain about pigs in power breaking rules</em>.”
<u>The mood of this passage is GLOOMY AND MELANCHOLY.</u>
The prevailing emotion or mood found in the excerpt is gloomy/melancholy. This is clear when we pay attention to the author's approach to the main character and the overall setting: the character wakes up in impenetrable "blackness", there's no sound but the wind in the "blackened trees", he stood on a "cold autistic dark", and so on and so forth. All the setting is filled with darkness, there is nothing that evokes to something cheerful or enjoyable and the character is pensive in the middle of all that.
Answer:
The words I would use are:
Genius, Quirky, Mathematician, Jewish, German, Physicist, Musical, Knowledgable, Influential, Wise, Curious, Nobel-Prize-Winner, Intelligent, Nerdy, and Brilliant.
<em>Hope this helps! :)</em>
This means that as their wave crashes against the rocks, the men shout how beautifully that wave could have danced in the bay if it could've stayed out to sea instead or rolling to the beach.