The lesson about life or human nature inferred or directly stated.
It's on page 120 in my book. You could have a different version, but I'd start there.
TKAM represents equality because in the book, Atticus, a white attorney, is defending Tom Robinson, a black man in court.
<span>Stories generally provide entertainment, but some have morals embedded in them. In such cases, the writer's purpose is to instruct the audience, not just enthrall them. These stories are also known as didactic tales. To "instruct" means to tell how to do something, which the story aims to and when something is "didactict", it aims to teach something.</span>
"Mighty” reflects how powerful and influential the speeches were to Douglass in a way that “great” would not.
<em>Mighty</em> means possessing power or authority. These elements are not exactly part of the definition of the word <em>great</em>, which simply means large, remarkable, or predominant. With <em>mighty</em>, there is a connotation of significance and impact. Indeed, the narrator tells us that these speeches fascinated him ("unabated interest") and influenced his thinking ("they gave tongue to interesting thoughts of my own soul").