“ Pathetic fallacies," were used in consciously and deliberately especially during the Victorian period, where precise visuality and secularism may have discouraged certain interpretations of the world. Poets such as Michael Field, Thomas Hardy, and Oscar Wilde employed versions of the pathetic fallacy in ways that made clear the subjective and figurative labor of such a description. The pathetic fallacy, then, was employed to call attention to the poet's own ordering of the world, and not so much a providential ordering . To begin, Michael Field attempts to make apparent the relationship between the poet/ speaker and the structuring of the world, within the logic of the poem "Cyclamens," written in1893. The poem explicitly refers to the poet/speaker's vision: "Yet I who have all these things in ken," (line 5). By referring to sight, Michael Field refers to the subjectivity of the scene, and the reader is made aware of the poem's status as an exercise of thought, rather than solely a universal truth (not to say there is no relationship between the two ). This subjectivity is extended to the subject of the poem, the flower cyclamen: "[I] Am struck to the heart by the chiseled white/ Of these handful of cyclamen," ( ll 6-7). First, Michael Field utilizes the pathetic fallacy by referring to the flower as "chiseled .“ Thomas Hardy explored the pathetic fallacy using natural landscapes, but used personification in order to posit its limits. In the "Darkling Thrush," written in 1900, Hardy justifies the use of pathetic fallacy, by describing nature as an actual human body: "The land's sharp features seemed to be/ the Century's corpse out leant," (Hardy ll 9-10). In doing so, and unlike Michael Field, Hardy extends the logic of the pathetic fallacy to the point of surrealism:if nature feels emotion, then it must have the capacity to feel emotion, and therefore must belong to a body. Additionally, the subjective limitations are marked by the qualifier "seemed," which exist throughout the poem: "And every spirit upon the Earth/ seemed fevourless as I ," ( ll 15-16). It must be noted, too, that as with the Field poem, Hardy makes apparent the emphatic process that the pathetic fallacy requires of a poet/observer. This is achieved with using "seemed," but especially with using "as I." By revealing the speaker's emotional state as parallel to the scene, Hardy reasserts the subjectivity of the pathetic fallacy. Oscar Wilde deliberately understands nature as artificial and consumable through poetry and description. For example, in the poem " Fantasies Decoratives II. Les Ballons ," the subject of the poem is an object of processed material, and Wilde describes the movement of this object thought natural scenery. However, the scenery is just as artificial as the object that moves throughout it: "Against these turbid turquoise skies ," (Wilde line 1), "Turbid," which means cloudy, can refer to the states of the sky, or the quality of a gemstone. This ambiguity is heightened as the sky is described as "turquoise," which refers to both the color and the stone used in jewelry. In this way, Wilde is extending the logic of the pathetic fallacy. Michael Field demonstrates and makes apparent the process of emphatic interpretation, while Hardy marks the limits of doing so, by hyperbolically extending the logic of the fallacy . Wilde extends the logic of the fallacy as well, but in ways that defeat its purpose: by removing emotion completely. All three demonstrate a conscious acknowledgment of the trend, and attempt to negotiate its demands within poetry.