Which preposition to use with colosseum
'It is the inside of the Colosseum in Rome, and you will see it before long,' said the lady very distinctly.
Mont Blanc at sunrise, the wild scenery of the Simplon, the exhumed streets of Pompeii, the Colosseum by moonlight, those wondrous galleries of painting and sculpture of which I had read as I had read of the palace of Aladdin and the gardens of the genii,the living man before me had seen all these!
"You meanyou mean Miss Eleanora will go to Tivoli and to the Colosseum alonewithwith Signor Caldini?" Henry Gregg smiled indulgently.
Going straight on reach the north-eastern angle of the Palatine, where now stands the arch of Constantine, with the Colosseum beyond it, and turning once more to the left, we begin to ascend a gentle slope which will take us to a ridge between the Palatine and the Esquilineanother of the spurs of the plain beyondknown by the name of the Velia.
The Sacred Way, it seems, was about 3/8 of a mile in length and extended from the Arch of Constantine or the northern end of the Colosseum near by, to the Capitol.
A gigantic Colosseum of a cup, lined in stacks and stacks of faces.