PATHETIC FALLACY


Meaning of PATHETIC FALLACY in English

poetic practice of attributing human emotion or responses to nature, inanimate objects, or animals. The practice is a form of personification that is as old as poetry, in which it has always been common to find smiling or dancing flowers, angry or cruel winds, brooding mountains, moping owls, or happy larks. The term was coined by John Ruskin in Modern Painters (184360). In some classical poetic forms such as the pastoral elegy, the pathetic fallacy is actually a required convention. In Milton's On The Morning of Christ's Nativity, all aspects of nature react affectively to the event of Christ's birth. The Stars with deep amaze Stand fixt in steadfast gaze Ruskin considered the excessive use of the fallacy the mark of an inferior poet. Later poets, howeverespecially the Imagists of the early 20th century, as well as T.S. Eliot and Ezra Poundused the pathetic fallacy freely and effectively.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.