Yes, often more power actually. When you’re trying to convince someone of something the most powerful and swaying argument is one that includes a certain amount of emotion (pathos). So for example, instead of just speaking about dying animals to argue for climate change, it is much more effective to tell a personal or emotional story involving the effects climate change has had a you or other real people. Hope that helps :)
Answer:
The moment of highest tension in the story was when Cameron had a look at her untidy room and thought that it would take forever to clean the room.
The moment was tensed when Cameron sat on her bed and looked at the piles of books on her desk, her unmade bed and her clean laundry in a basket at the door. She got sad and thought it will take forever for her to tidy the room which means that she couldn't go playing with her friends.
<span>Huck finds the
body of Buck Grangerford.</span>
<span>At
the end of chapter 18, Huck discovers two bodies in the river and Buck’s is one
of them.
Buck and another Grangerford boy were wounded when they jumped into
the river after the Shepherdsons shot them.</span>
The supposed reason for telling a story about a sort of indignity or humiliation may be to embrace the experience and to realize that you are not alone.