IDYL - meaning and definition. What is IDYL
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What (who) is IDYL - definition

SHORT RUSTIC POEM
Idyl; Idylls; Pastoral idyll; Idyllic; Idyllic poetry

Idyl         
·noun A short poem; properly, a short pastoral poem; as, the idyls of Theocritus; also, any poem, especially a narrative or descriptive poem, written in an eleveted and highly finished style; also, by extension, any artless and easily flowing description, either in poetry or prose, of simple, rustic life, of pastoral scenes, and the like.
idyl         
n.
[Written also Idyll.]
1.
Bucolic, eclogue, pastoral, pastoral poem.
2.
Short poem (highly wrought).
Idyll         
An idyll (, ; from Greek , eidullion, "short poem"; occasionally spelt idyl in American English)εἰδύλλιον, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus is a short poem, descriptive of rustic life, written in the style of Theocritus' short pastoral poems, the Idylls (Εἰδύλλια).

Wikipedia

Idyll

An idyll (, UK also ; from Greek εἰδύλλιον, eidullion, "short poem"; occasionally spelt idyl in American English) is a short poem, descriptive of rustic life, written in the style of Theocritus' short pastoral poems, the Idylls (Εἰδύλλια).

Unlike Homer, Theocritus did not engage in heroes and warfare. His idylls are limited to a small intimate world, and describe scenes from everyday life. Later imitators include the Roman poets Virgil and Catullus, Italian poets Torquato Tasso, Sannazaro and Leopardi, the English poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson (Idylls of the King), and Nietzsche's Idylls from Messina. Goethe called his poem Hermann and Dorothea—which Schiller considered the very climax in Goethe's production—an idyll.