Personification: Difference between revisions

From LitWiki
No edit summary
(No difference)

Revision as of 15:53, 7 October 2004

Anything, excluding humans, described as possessing human features and charateristics, for example:

The wind blew the flowers as if they had sneezed.
The paint was a flesh toned color.

Obviously, sneezing is something that flowers cannot do, but humans can. Therefore, the flowers and paint have been personified through a human-like characteristic.


Literary Terms

Works Consulted

  • Chapin, Chester Fisher. Personification in Eighteenth Century English Poetry. New York, New York: 1974.
  • Paxson, James S. The Poetics of Personification. Cambridge, England/ New York, New York: 1994.