However this may be, the allegorising habit manifests itself recognisably enough in French literature towards the close of the twelfth century.
The deficiency of action, however, and the continual allegorisingthreaten to make it monotonous had it been much longer continued in the same strain.
Nor had the tradition of Villon, overlaid though it was by the abundance and popularity of formal and allegorising poetry, died out in France.
The question of the origin of this habit of allegorising and personification is one which has been often incidentally discussed by literary historians, but which has never been exhaustively treated.
This poem is in many ways interesting, though not much can be said for its general conception, and though it suffers terribly from the allegorising already alluded to.
When Philo, by allegorising away the simple human parts of his books, is untrue to Moses's teaching, he becomes untrue to Plato's.
As yet we have found no unfair allegorising of Moses, or twisting of Plato.
We need sorely a critical edition of the curious Perceval li Gallois, with its blending of wild, folk-lore features with late proselytising and allegorising tendency, its baffling parallels to the German Parzival.
The Persian religion, in the stage at which it is preserved in the Avesta, spiritualised much of the primitive Aryan mythology, allegorising many of its deities into personifications of good and evil principles and qualities.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "allegorising" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.