Which preposition to use with retold
Here had been a thing that would bear telling and retelling for many a year.
Retold by May Byron for little people.
The island of the mighty, retold from Mabinogion by Padraic Colum; illustrated by Wilfred Jones.
This I caught, and more That may not be retold to any ear.
Sir Gawayne and the Green Knight has been retold in modern English prose by J.L. Weston (London: David Nutt).
Those who have the time to study the beginnings of the novel will be interested in reading, Guy, Earl of Warwick (Morley's Early Prose Romances) or Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Retold in Modern Prose, with Introduction and Notes, by Jessie L. Weston (London: David Nutt, two shillings).
Retold for the nursery by May Byron.
The title of one of his collections, Made in France: French Tales Retold with a U.S. Twist (1893), forms an introduction to his fiction.
The story here poetically retold of the great Florentine sculptor shows how much a lofty spirit may make of unpromising material.
Nothing is so refreshing to a jaded sense of humour as to be the recipient of one of your own stories retold with appreciative fervour but with all the point left out.
In place of Mallet's Northern Antiquities, twentieth-century readers will prefer books like Guerber's Myths of Northern Lands and Mabie's Norse Stories Retold from the Eddas.
The same night that the letter was received by mine host, this tale was retold at a cow-camp in the Strip by the trio.