Answer:
This Question talks about the book titled To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee published in 1960.
In chapter ten of the book, Jem and Scout went exploring with their air-rifles to see if they could find a rabbit or a squirrel. They noticed a dog showing that something is not right. Then reported to Calpernia who feared the dog is suffering the dog from rabies.
The dog represents the "madness", and Atticus will do anything to protect his family.
Atticus kills the mad dog with a shot between the eyes.
It fits with the symbolic nature of the incident by showing that some actions are EXTREMELY IMPORTANT.
He promoted arts and literature in the golden age.
<span>The war stifled the Confederacy's bid for national independence and destroyed the institution of slavery upon which it rested. The ensuing peace—specifically, the Radical Reconstruction crafted by the Republican Party—reunited the nation economically and politically, yet did so on terms that not just the defeated Confederates came to resent. Small wonder that each generation has assessed the war through the prism of its own central political concerns.</span>