| 释义 |
Arcady /ˈɑːkədi /noun literaryAn ideal rustic paradise.As Revell puts it in his prefatory note: ‘the Arcady all around.’...- The Eclogues came to signify Arcady as a place where poetry and love meet with or avoid the worlds of politics, cities, and empires.
- The picture most admired by literary men was Poussin's second treatment of the theme ‘Et in Arcadia Ego’, The Shepherds of Arcady, c. 1650-5 (Paris, Louvre), a picture which fascinated later writers and painters.
Origin Late 16th century: from Greek Arkadia (see Arcadia). |