Elysii Campi
(
Elysium,
Ἠλύσιον
πέδιον). The abode of the blessed in another world, where they enjoyed all manner
of the purest pleasures. In the Homeric mythology the Elysian Fields lay on the western margin
of the earth, by the stream of Oceanus, and to them the mortal relatives of the king of the
gods were transported, without tasting of death, to enjoy an immortality of
bliss (
Od. iv. 563 foll.). In the time of Hesiod, the Elysian Plains had
become the Isles of the Blessed (
μακάρων νῆσοι) in the
Western Ocean (
Op. et D. 171). Pindar, who has left a glowing description of
Elysium, appears to reduce the number of these happy islands to one (
Ol. ii.
129). At a later day a change of religious ideas ensued, brought about by the increase of
geographical knowledge, and Elysium was moved down to the lower world as the place of reward
for the good. The Vergilian conception respecting Elysium made it a region blessed with
perpetual spring, clothed with continual verdure, beautiful with flowers, shaded by pleasant
groves, and refreshed by neverfailing fountains. Here the righteous lived in perfect felicity,
communing with each other, bathed in a flood of light proceeding from their own sun, and with
the sky at eve lighted up by their own constellations:
solemque suum, sua
sidera norunt (
Verg. Aen. vi. 541).
Their employments below resembled those on earth, and whatever had greatly engaged their
attention in the upper world continued to be a source of innocent enjoyment in the world below
(
Verg. Aen. vi. 653). See
Hades.