It is the pristinespirit and it is in the interstellar spaces outside of the planets.
It was restored by Louis Napoleon during the Second Empire, and is still to be seen in all its pristine glory.
But, like Peleus, he has to hold her fast in spite of various transformations, until he has overcome the charm and has her once more in her pristine shape!
It is in your power to save him, and to restore his honour and reputation to their pristine purity.
A thick coating of paint quite spoils the well-carved Gothic stalls, and it is to be hoped that when the scheme of decoration reaches this chapel these fine stalls will be scraped and then left in their pristine state.
The culmination resulted in what is still to be seen in all its pristine glory to-day, for Ste.
When morning came, their jaded limbs, like the joints of wooden dolls, almost threatened to creak; and only with the warmth of sunrise did they regain some of their pristine elasticity.
By the time General Rundle had neared the town, it had resumed its pristine state of innocence, and the inhabitants were preparing effective demonstrations of loyalty.
It is true that memory sometimes, as in a vision, seems to raise the curtain upon the past and restore it to us in its pristine reality.
In both, virtue implies a certain sense of defeat, a fatal unnatural limitation, as if a pristine ideal had been surrendered and what remained were at best a compromise.
These natural phenomena, unintelligently regarded as anomalies and abuses, are the appanage of war in its pristine and proper form.
What remained, in the time of Noah, of pristine wisdom was saved with him in the ark.
Even the theologians speak of the pristine wisdom,--the theologians with whom we, who practice the occult science, agree far more than the simple and suspicious among them think.
I believe he supplies in fuller measure that pristine element, something akin to the unbreathed air of mountain and shore, which makes the arterial blood of poetry and literature, than any other modern writer.
Sometimes the hills are cultivated in terraces, on which grow vines and olives, but more often they remain in their pristine condition, clothed with masses of tangled underwood.
The school was then transferred to Sidon, but appears to have languished on its transplantation to a new soil and never to have recovered its pristine vigour or vitality.
The remedy is a return to the pristinestate of the will, by vigorous, positive effort; or, as we are here told, by steady application to a principle.
Blake felt the pristinethrills of the great new birth in the poetry of Wordsworth, introduced to him by Mr. Crabb Robinson, and also in personal acquaintance with Coleridge, a genius somewhat akin to himself.
Tea soothes the nerves; it clears the blood, expels vapors from the brain, and restores the fountain of life to pristine activity.
But it flourishes still with pristine vigor in New France, that olive branch grafted on the stately tree of the British Empire.
At another Time he came to them in another Form and Shape, unlike to his pristine one, but they were sure it was He by his Exposition of the Scripture.
Now it is that the learned languages are to their pristine purity restored, viz.
They will regain their pristine powers only in the world to come.
Let us not wonder overmuch: some of them have recovered again, quite recently, a part of their pristine popularity.