Nonetheless, they manage to bring him back peacefully, where it is revealed Revise is actually his son, and the Pathetic Fallacy is his father.
12.
Mopsus first laments Daphnis as a godlike figure whose death has caused all of nature to mourn ( a pathetic fallacy conventional in pastoral elegies ).
13.
The pathetic fallacy makes this strange appearance : " But his thoughts didn't give a ( expletive deleted ) about his needs at the moment ."
14.
The old order was beginning to be replaced by the new just as Ruskin addressed the matter, and the use of the pathetic fallacy markedly began to disappear.
15.
Gary the Pathetic Fallacy informs Jack of the facts after a mysterious, old man shows up and plunges the sword Excalibur through Jack's chest ( and dies shortly thereafter ).
16.
When Jack Frost arrives to slay the dragon ( not realizing the dragon is his biological father ), the Pathetic Fallacy rushes to Jack Horner's defense, destroying the Fulminate Blade.
17.
For example, it employs literary devices, such as pathetic fallacy ( attribution of human-like traits to impersonal forces or inanimate objects ), which are not as common in modern reference texts.
18.
Gadol loves the pathetic fallacy : nights, drought, disease, and harvests run parallel to every emotional development in this often overwrought book, a structural simple-mindedness that helps to destroy what little sympathy he builds.
19.
Taylor believes that tools have personalities, despite Ruskin's warning against committing the pathetic fallacy, or attributing human characteristics to inanimate objects . ( " Being dead, Ruskin is arguably inanimate these days; thus I refute him,"
20.
Ruskin coined the term " pathetic fallacy " to attack the sentimentality that was common to the poetry of the late 18th century, and which was rampant among poets including Burns, Blake, Wordsworth, Shelley and Keats.