No matter how hard you try, you can not evade death. It is imminent.
a folk tale teaches a lesson indirectly.
No.
In Edgar Allan Poe's "The Masque of the Red Death," the masked visitor symbolizes the inevitability of death, illustrating that no one can escape mortality. The revelers, in their opulent surroundings, believe they can avoid the plague by isolating themselves, but the arrival of the masked figure serves as a stark reminder that death is inescapable. Ultimately, the guests' fate reveals the futility of their attempts to evade their reality, teaching a profound lesson about the universality of death and the illusion of safety.
A lesson the writer wants to teach the readers
A lesson the writer wants to teach the readers
A lesson the writer wants to teach the readers
A lesson the writer wants to teach the readers
A lesson the writer wants to teach the readers
A story which is written to teach a moral is called a homilectic. The moral it is meant to teach is called the homily. But not all stories are homilectic. The best ones hardly ever are.
its called a 'fable'.
The special name for a lesson learned at the end of a fable is a moral. Fables often include anthropomorphized animals or inanimate objects to teach a moral lesson or convey a specific message to the reader.
The complete subject is "many fables." Fables are fictional stories that often involve animals or inanimate objects that teach a moral lesson or a practical truth.