Figure in rhetoric that gives the floor to an absent person, animal or inanimate beings (nature, time). Figure introduced in speech that is a person dead, absent or feint, an inanimate thing he personifies, it does speak or act; (Rare) Speech vehement and emphatic. It is sometimes to say a dead animal, something personified. It generates a complete metamorphosis of the world, enabling better attention by the reader who has more references, thus persuaded more easily. It is a personification of the hypernym. Ex. Charles Baudelaire:
I am the author of a pipe;
You see, to contemplate my mine
On Abyssinian or Cafrine,
That my master is a heavy smoker.
Figure in rhetoric that gives the floor to an absent person, animal or inanimate beings (nature, time). Figure introduced in speech that is a person dead, absent or feint, an inanimate thing he personifies, it does speak or act; (Rare) Speech vehement and emphatic. It is sometimes to say a dead animal, something personified. It generates a complete metamorphosis of the world, enabling better attention by the reader who has more references, thus persuaded more easily. It is a personification of the hypernym. Ex. Charles Baudelaire:
I am the author of a pipe;
You see, to contemplate my mine
On Abyssinian or Cafrine,
That my master is a heavy smoker.