i think you confuse this with a pentode output stage...
I suggest to viewers to check out and study some books for more information. Here are just a few to check out. My below explanation
is not exhaustive.
1) Semiconductor and Tube Electronics by James G Brazee (My engineering textbook.)
2) RCA Radiotron Designers Handbook
3) Radio Amateurs Handbook
4) RCA receiving tube manual
A pentode operates quite differently than a triode. In the pentode's case, raising or lowering the plate voltage
has little effect on the the plate current, assuming the negative DC bias remains constant, because of the screens electrostatic shielding effect.
Since the plate voltage raises, the plate current rises only slightly, the plate dissipation increases.
The screen grid has the same/similar effect on the plate current as the plate does in a pentode. In fact, back in the "olden"
days, the screen grid was sometimes used as the plate, while the plate was grounded to form a shield, used in the low signal arena such
as phono stages etc to lessen hum.
Below is what is called the plate family of curves, a graph, for the 417A/5842 triode. Let's examine it.

Notice in the graph the negative DC bias "lines". If one follows a line, let's say -1 volt DC bias "line", as the plate voltage
rises, say from 100 to 150 volts, the plate current rises, thus the plate dissipation rises. The same can be said for any of the DC bias "lines".
Notice as each line approaches zero plate current, the curvature increases even more. The plate resistance is increasing until cutoff, zero
current, in which the plate resistance is infinite.
Now if we had a perfect triode, in the case that the negative DC grid voltage rises, the plate voltage rises while the plate current decreases, assuming
we have a plate resistor/plate resistance or plate reactance such as an output transformer. This is a simple explanation.
This is how amplification works. If we have a negative DC "bias" voltage on the grid, and feed a signal onto that grid, modulating the grid, then we will vary the bias voltage from its DC value, and the plate current and plate voltage will vary. The gain we experience is determined by the gain of the tube under design conditions. So we could have a gain of any number, generally until we reach about 50 or so. Less is much more common though. By the way, the "amplification factor" listed in the tube specs is not the actual gain of the circuit, but the Mu. Mu is defined as "minus" plate voltage change divided by grid voltage applied/change, with constant plate current. (The "minus" sign simply means the signal is inverted.)
Cheers
Steve