It teaches morals such as loyalty and honour, 'what goes around comes around', not to trust evil sources who promise happiness through evil, and..... hmmm..... we can also learn more about the time setting.
eg. emphasis on supernatural and witches
eg. significance of the raven that croaks hoarse upon the fatal entrance of Duncan
Also, don't blindly trust others!
eg. Banquo's trust in Macbeth
eg. King's trust in Macbeth
eg. Macbeth's trust in witches
The moral lesson of Henry IV Part 1 is that you become a better person by hanging out with thieves, drunks and prostitutes, stealing with the thieves, drinking with the drunks and employing the prostitutes. Prince Hal is clearly the hero of the play and that's what he does. He defeats Hotspur, who spends his time hanging around with bishops and dukes and people of that kind. If you feel uncomfortable with this as a moral lesson, then you need to stop imagining that Shakespeare wrote his plays to teach moral lessons. He was a playwright, not a preacher. Falstaff is certainly an entertaining and engaging old rogue, but I wouldn't hold him up as any kind of moral example to anyone.
The purpose of a drama performance could be to: - entertain - teach a lesson (a principal or moral) - reenact history This is a question I'm having trouble with as well, but ^above^ is what I thought the answer might be!
the lesson that the author attempt to teach in this poem is some of the little kid make their parents upset about them
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Didactic Poem
a folk tale teaches a lesson indirectly.
No.
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.
No matter how hard you try, you can not evade death. It is imminent.
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.