Left to herself, Nance discovered a quiet, limpid pool, not far from the van, which appeared to be some two or three feet deep.
Bright under its limpid waters gleam the towers of many a 'sunken city.
The sovereign instrument of both is undoubtedly the simple, broad, pure, fresh, and limpid vehicle of Fresco.
And now day followed day in a sequence of limpiddawns and cloudless sunsets.
So this was the man who had enveloped her, swayed her senses, whirled her upward into his ocean of limpid light!
But without its ivy and its limpid river, the ruined Monastery of Boyle, grand and interesting as it is, would lose a great deal of its attractions.
The monstrous Mississippi or the thundering Niagara would spoil such a miniature paradise; but the limpid Laune and O'Sullivan's babbling cascade suit it exactly.
In its depths laughs or murmurs a limpid stream that can rarely be noticed, such is the thickness and luxuriance of the trees and shrubs that overhang it.
It has rushing, limpid rivers above, and boiling, roaring ones below.
A limpid river is one of the most beautiful things in nature, but a river of dirty water would not be beautiful if it flowed through the Garden of Eden.
It was then the real salt from the broad Atlantic came into the limpid waters of the little harbor.
It was the tiniest walk from the supper room or the high tea-table to the little green-painted boat, and then away to float over the limpid waves.
You trace there no effort in the varied play of the physiognomy, no constraint in the voluntary movements--a noble soul knows not constraint; the voice becomes music, and the limpid stream of its modulations touches the heart.
Had the friendly old setter, whose head at this moment was on his knee, while her limpid eyes swore to him that all her love was his, suddenly turned and rent him, it would scarcely be a shock worse than that he had received.
The night travelling from the East blotted out of the limpid sky the purple stain of the high land.
His conversation, like a limpid stream, flows smoothly and brightly along, revealing the depths beneath its current, now sparkling over the objects it discloses or reflecting those by which it glides.
Solid outlines then seem to waver like objects seen through a sheet of limpid water.
Because the pearly white surfaces of the grisaille would make the adjacent colored surfaces appear heavy and opaque, they introduced, into these latter, limpid blues and yellows, very light reds, whites with a greenish or rosy tint.
The hues, while limpid and pleasing, show none of the lovely half-tones which the Flamboyant-Renaissance day was to achieve.
Its charm had been to retain the candor of childhood, the limpid book of young saints.
Waiting a moment to let the golden creatures become quiet, Joe began his own swimming movements, turning, circling and somersaulting in the limpid element.
There are more limpid streams, And gardens yet more fair.
Limpid RIOS intersected these plains, and lost themselves among the tall grasses.
The limpid waters were nearly at boiling point, while some neighboring springs spread out like sheets of glass.
The river, half a mile in width, wound its limpid course between tall rows of gum-trees and acacias.
Defn: Characterized by clearness or transparency; clear; as, a limpid stream.
Physics) Defn: A transparent limpid liquid, slightly blue in color, consisting of a mixture of liquefied oxygen and nitrogen.
To flow in a thin, limpid humor; to ooze, as gleet.
Defn: Any plant of the genus Phytocrene, climbing shrubs of Asia and Africa, the stems of which are singularly porous, and when cut stream with a limpid potable juice.
Frost lamp, a lamp placed below the oil tube of an Argand lamp to keep the oil limpid on cold nights; -- used especially in lighthouses.
One diagnostic symptom of a loaded state of the colon, is an abundant secretion of urine, as limpid as water.
In health the sac-like covering, or investing membrane, of the testicle secretes a limpid fluid which lubricates its inner surface.
They afford a glimpse of a terrestrial paradise through which flow the limpid waters of a deep stream.
Near the village flows a stream bordered by poplars and willows that overshadow the deep but limpid waters.
It was plain thelimpid eyes of Raoul were troubled at this speech.
The small black eye of Colbert, dilated by envy, and the limpid eye of Louis XIV.
This clear limpid oil having no perceptible smell, is much esteemed by watchmakers and perfumers; it is expensive and not often to be procured pure, consequently the oil would be a very profitable export.
If this ever-flowering cinnamon be cut or bored, a limpid water will issue out of the wound; but it is of use only for the leaves and bark.