Not really, because personification is actually giving a non living object human qualities. Like- "The door creakedopen." A door cannot creak, because it is not alive. Another example would be- 'The rat laughed merrily. "No, of course there is no cat!" ' A rat cannot really talk, can he? So there is your answer, it wouldn't really be unless you said "The sky began churning.'' The point is, you have to rephrase it, using a different words, or rephrasing it so it will seem like a human quality to 'brew'. Think about it!
Big Sky Brewing Company was created in 1995.
No, a personification is when you give an inanimate object human qualities.
The sky roared with anger!
metaphor
The dark sky was angry and resentful.
"Hung high" is not an example of personification. Personification lends human qualities to inhuman objects or beings - for example, "the sky choked and sobbed" states that the sky, an inhuman entity, carries actions normally done by humans, like choking and crying. Being literally hung high can happen to anything, even inhuman, so this does not qualify as personification.
Yes, "under the jewelled sky" is an example of personification because the sky, an inanimate object, is described as having the qualities of a jewel, which is typically associated with beauty and value. This personification adds an element of vivid imagery and enhances the poetic quality of the description.
Uranus (Ouranos meaning "sky" or "heaven") was the personification and god of the heavens/sky.
personification
In the darkness the moon smiled in the sacred sky
Caelus, the personification of the sky.
Very well-written example of personification.