Why this word is great
BUCOLISM — [Noun] A literary or artistic quality evoking an idealized, rustic character of pastoral life; the distilled essence of the bucolic. From bucolic, from the Latin bucolicus, from the Greek βουκολικός (boukolikós, "pastoral, rustic", from βουκόλος (boukólos, "herdsman")) + the suffix -ism, denoting a quality, state, or doctrine. Unlike "pastoral" (which names a specific genre) or "rusticity" (which implies a coarse, unvarnished reality), bucolism is the wistful atmosphere of an artistic retreat. It is the dappled light in a Claude Lorrain landscape, the scripted harmony of a shepherd's pipe and birdsong, and the perfectly composed idleness of figures in a Theocritus poem—a crafted nostalgia for a peace that never truly existed, save in the imagination's gentle forgery.