Only the Animals

Only the Animals

by

Ceridwen Dovey

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Only the Animals makes teaching easy.
Themes and Colors
The Interconnectedness of Humans and Animals Theme Icon
Animals and War Theme Icon
Human Cruelty Theme Icon
Kindness and Compassion Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Only the Animals, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Animals and War Theme Icon

All of the stories in Only the Animals are set in the midst of violent human conflicts, such as World War I, World War II, the Gulf War, or the U.S. invasion of Iraq. As such, the stories’ animal narrators provide a unique perspective on these human conflicts and their effects on animals. Indeed, Only the Animals proposes that it’s actually not accurate to refer to wars as human conflicts, given that animals are so often forced to participate in war efforts. And Only the Animals shows that even if animals don’t actively participate, they still end up being some of the most tragic victims of human violence.

The very premise of Only the Animals—giving animals the opportunity to narrate their own stories about war—makes it clear that war negatively affects everyone and everything, people, animals, and plants alike. Every creature in the book somehow suffers as a result of war or violence. Sprout the dolphin and Fufu the pony, for instance, are enlisted in the war effort, while Red Peter the chimp and Kiki the cat suffer much like human civilians. Other characters, like Sel the mussel and the elephant, are distant onlookers but still end up dying in the course of a war. These examples, the novel suggests, aren’t so different from the way that war affects people. The animal narrators describe human soldiers dying horrific deaths in the trenches or as a result of bombs, and human civilians struggling to survive famine or displacement as their countries fight wars. Additionally, other narrators describe how war affects the natural landscape. For example, the third-person narrator of “Telling Fairy Tales” describes the barren trees surrounding Sarajevo during the 1997 siege. Meanwhile, when Kiki the cat is in the trenches of World War I, she says that “Without the changing palette of the trees to signal the shift towards winter (the leaves have been exploded off), and the songbirds mostly gone quiet, it becomes difficult to know where I am, in what season, in which century.” These anecdotes speak to the terrible power of war to negatively impact all living creatures.

However, the stories suggest that war can be particularly devastating for animals because people tend to value animal lives less than human lives. Having completed his training with Herr Oberndorff some time before his story begins, the chimp Red Peter now believes he’s human—but as famine grips his German city during World War I, Red Peter finds that people begin to treat him with scorn and suspicion as he wanders the city, looking for food on the black market. Evelyn, Herr Oberndorff’s wife, encapsulates Peter’s struggle in one of her letters when she writes, “People get angry when they see animals being fed, even if it is with turnip peels.” With this, she gets at the idea that animal lives aren’t as valuable as human lives—people resent the fact that animals are being fed at all, while they themselves go hungry. In “Telling Fairy Tales,” a military official in Sarajevo echoes Evelyn when one of his colleagues suggest smuggling the last two bears in the Sarajevo zoo out of the city. The man says, “Smuggling two bears out of Sarajevo in a food-relief convoy—what does that say to people left behind? Why bears, not babies?” He continues that he “can’t allow” them to “worry[] about wild animals” as their enemies fire on Sarajevo, showing clearly where his priorities lie—with people, not with animals.

However, the book suggests that simply choosing not to value animals’ lives during wartime pales in comparison to countries knowingly sacrificing animals to advance their cause. “Hundstage,” for instance, touches briefly on the fates of the Allies’ anti-tank dogs during World War II: the dogs were trained to look for food under German tanks, but when they approached German tanks looking for food, they’d explode the tanks as well as themselves. The dogs, of course, have no stakes in the war and are being used as disposable pawns in a human conflict. This speaks to what the collection implies is people’s willingness to sacrifice anything and anyone they deem inferior, if it means winning a war.

Finally, the collection shows that war has the unique power to transform animals who were once revered members of a community into nothing more than a food source. In most of the stories featuring zoos, zoo animals exist to bring pleasure to passersby, and many zoo animals are a source of pride for the city. But during wartime, when people are going hungry, they begin to see animals as nothing more than a food source. As the situation grows dire in World War I Germany, for instance, the chimp Red Peter—who, at the start of the story, lives in a hotel like a human might—is gradually stripped of his living quarters, his clothes, and his ability to buy food like a person. By the end of the story, he finds himself back in his cage at the zoo where he once learned to be human—and the story heavily implies that he’s going to end up as Evelyn’s dinner. War, in this sense, has the power to deprive everyone of their humanity. Red Peter becomes just an ape and therefore a food source after spending years living as a human, and even being Evelyn’s lover for a time—and it’s implied that Evelyn also gives up some of her humanity when she traps and plans to eat him.

War, the book shows, is universally devastating: it wreaks havoc on people, animals, and the environment alike. And while the stories don’t shy away from the horrific consequences of war on people (both soldiers and civilians), it nevertheless asks readers to consider the toll war takes on animals as well. Animals, the book suggests, suffer greatly during war—especially because, as animals, they’re not thought to be as important or as sentient as human victims of conflict.

Related Themes from Other Texts
Compare and contrast themes from other texts to this theme…

Animals and War ThemeTracker

The ThemeTracker below shows where, and to what degree, the theme of Animals and War appears in each story of Only the Animals. Click or tap on any chapter to read its Summary & Analysis.
How often theme appears:
story length:
Get the entire Only the Animals LitChart as a printable PDF.
Only the Animals PDF

Animals and War Quotes in Only the Animals

Below you will find the important quotes in Only the Animals related to the theme of Animals and War.
The Bones: Soul of Camel Quotes

Zeriph had been proud of me, carrying the first piano into the core of our new country. [...]

But for what? I carried that thing of beauty all that way on my back, with the ropes cutting into my bones, so that somebody could tinkle on the keys for the midday drinks at the pub in Alice. That’s what broke Zeriph’s heart, that the piano’s music could mean nothing without the false prophetry of drink.

Related Characters: The Camel (speaker), Zeriph
Page Number: 13
Explanation and Analysis:
Pigeons, a Pony, the Tomcat and I: Soul of Cat Quotes

But this late autumn at the front is unlike any I have witnessed. Without the changing palette of the trees to signal the shift towards winter (the leaves have been exploded off), and the songbirds mostly gone quiet, it becomes difficult to know where I am, in what season, in which century.

Related Characters: The Cat/Kiki-la-Doucette (speaker), Colette
Page Number: 19
Explanation and Analysis:

I looked more closely at the man driving the mules. He was far too old to fight. The mules showed none of their usual inclination to misbehave and were following him peaceably. “They love him,” I said.

“And he them. I’ve seen a driver refuse to leave his team of battery mules when they became entangled in barbed wire. He died with them.”

“Why are so many of them missing their tails?” I asked.

“When they’re starving, they eat each other’s tails.”

Related Characters: The Cat/Kiki-la-Doucette (speaker), The Tomcat (speaker)
Page Number: 27
Explanation and Analysis:
I, the Elephant, Wrote This: Soul of Elephant Quotes

“Death is not something to worship now that you are adults,” the matriarch warned. “It is the province only of the very young to want things to work out badly. The souls in the sky live only as long as we remember their stories. Beyond that there is nothing, not for them nor for us.”

Related Characters: The Matriarch (speaker), Elephant, Sister
Related Symbols: Stars and Space
Page Number: 162
Explanation and Analysis:

“A zoo,” she said to them, “is a very dangerous place for an animal in wartime, for it can mean the difference between life and death for the human inhabitants of a city. But it was not the poor who ate the zoo animals in Paris.”

Related Characters: Sister (speaker), Elephant, Castor and Pollux, Daughter, Nephew
Related Symbols: Zoos
Page Number: 168
Explanation and Analysis:

As we were dying, our foreheads pressed together, one of the humans stepped forward and placed a single orange in the gap between our trunks. It was an act of kindness, I think, a way to thank us for our sacrificed flesh. I was already too far from the appetites of life to eat it, but the smell made me briefly happy—we were children again, two sisters playing beside the fence separating us from a fragrant orchard of oranges, longing to die gloriously and have our souls pointed out to the youngest in the herd on warm evenings: see, there are the stars which form their trunks, and there are the stars of their tails.

Related Characters: Elephant (speaker), Sister, Castor and Pollux
Related Symbols: Stars and Space
Page Number: 175
Explanation and Analysis:
Telling Fairy Tales: Soul of Bear Quotes

“I’m waiting for her to die so I can eat her.” He chewed at the bread.

“Why wait?” asked the witch.

“People would stop risking their lives, dodging sniper bullets to bring me bread, if they thought I had no heart, eating her while she’s still half alive,” the bear said.

Related Characters: The Black Bear (speaker), The Witch (speaker), Henry Lawson, The Brown Bear
Related Symbols: Zoos, Food
Page Number: 180
Explanation and Analysis:

It was dark in the zoo by now, darker than it had ever been before the siege started, for the city of Sarajevo no longer relied on electricity. It had become medieval, lightless, its citizens forced to fetch water from underground springs and to wash by candlelight. And the zoo was no longer a modern thoroughfare for the ogling masses. Now the few who dared visit brought sacred offerings of food. The two last remaining animals had become central to the city’s very survival, to the idea of the city’s survival.

Related Characters: The Black Bear, The Brown Bear, The Witch
Related Symbols: Zoos, Food
Page Number: 184
Explanation and Analysis:

“But you must see what sort of position this would put us in. Smuggling two bears out of Sarajevo in a food-relief convoy—what does that say to the people left behind? Why bears, not babies? I mean, a busload of children trying to get out of the city was fired on, and we’re spending time worrying about these wild animals? We can’t allow it, I’m afraid.” He was the only one who had not brought stale bread in his pockets for the bears.

Related Characters: The Black Bear, The Brown Bear
Related Symbols: Zoos, Food
Page Number: 191
Explanation and Analysis:
A Letter to Sylvia Plath: Soul of Dolphin Quotes

Perhaps you should be asking yourselves different questions. Why do you sometimes treat other people as humans and sometimes as animals? And why do you sometimes treat creatures as animals and sometimes as humans?

Related Characters: The Dolphin/Sprout (speaker), The Cat/Kiki-la-Doucette, Karol, The Bear Prince, Sylvia Plath, Ted Hughes, Henri
Page Number: 206
Explanation and Analysis:

Some native wild dolphins were also killed this way, though we’d tried to keep them away from the area by acting territorially. Officer Bloomington took this especially hard. He hadn’t anticipated it as a consequence and blamed himself for their deaths. He felt that the skilled Navy dolphins at least had a chance of defending themselves, but the native dolphins had been put directly in harm’s way. He tried to record their deaths officially so that this could be prevented on future missions, but his superiors blocked him, worried about a public outcry.

Related Characters: The Dolphin/Sprout (speaker), Officer Bloomington
Page Number: 217
Explanation and Analysis: