Which preposition to use with idyll
The Deserted Village was in point of fact an imaginative idyll,the supreme idyll of English poetry; but Goldsmith insisted that it was a realistic record of actual conditions.
His denunciations of the brutalities of old Dutch slavery are full of genuine eloquence and of sound sense likewise; and the loves of Stedman and his brown Joanna are one of the sweetest idylls in the English tongue. {93c} Penelope (?). {93d} Crax. {95a} Philodendron. {95b} Bromelia. {102} Alosa Bishopi.
"In the Idyll on the peace, I made the first essay to throw off rhymes, and the kind reception that poem met with, has encouraged me to attempt it again.
In 1867 he contributed a story to Aunt Judy's Magazine called "Bruno's Revenge," the charming little idyll out of which "Sylvie and Bruno" grew.
This tendency of the drama to absorb pastoral elements rather from the lyric and the idyll than from regular plays in that kind is significant.
HERMANN AND DOROTHEA, the title of an idyll by Goethe.
I dreamed of a unique, an unheard-of idyll with a woman far from the one with whom I had hitherto lost all my time, a woman whose features I did not see, but whose shadow I imagined beside my own as we walked along the road together.
I have not been persuaded by my friends to change the Idyll into Idyllium; for having an English word set me by Mr. Dryden, which he uses indifferently with the Greek, I thought it might be as proper in an English poem.