1245 examples of liverpool in sentences

Rabelais, Pantag´ruel, iii. 39 (1545.) BRI´DLESLY (Joe), a horse-dealer at Liverpool, of whom Julian Peveril buys a horse.

BRUCE (Mr. Robert), mate on a bark trading between Liverpool and St. John's, N.B., sees a man writing in the captain's cabin, a stranger who disappears after pencilling certain lines on the slate.

7. Paragraph of Shipping Intelligence from the "Liverpool Courier" of June 21st, 1848: The bark Euterpe, Captain Riding, belonging to the Transatlantic Clipper Line of Messrs. Judkins & Cooke, left the Mersey yesterday afternoon, bound for New York.

When he had learned his trade he removed, in the hopes of finding more remunerative employment, to Liverpool.

Here, however, he found it so hard to support himself as a blacksmith that he set to work to learn the trade of ship's smitha remunerative one in those days, when Liverpool was the centre of the ship-building trade.

Hall Caine has no remembrance of the first years which he spent in Liverpool, and his earliest recollections are of life in his grandmother's cottage of Ballavolley, Ballaugh, in the Isle of Man, a house set in a wooded plain surrounded by high mountains which glow, here yellow with the gorse, there purple with the heather.

His talent for reading passages of Shakespeare aloud was such that at the school at Liverpool, where he was educated, his schoolmaster, George Gill, used to make him read aloud before all the boys.

Till the age of twenty-four he remained in Liverpool, earning his living in a builder's office, lecturing, starting societies, working as secretary of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, and writing for the papers.

Hall Caine then returned to London, and whilst continuing to contribute to various papers, and notably to the "Liverpool Mercury," to which he was attached for years, he wrote his "Recollections of Rossetti," which brought him forty pounds (two hundred dollars) and attracted some attention in literary circles, without, however, enhancing his reputation with the general public.

He had married in the meanwhile, and with forty pounds (two hundred dollars) in the bank and an assured income of a hundred (five hundred dollars) a year from the "Liverpool Mercury," he went with his wife to live in a small house in the Isle of Wight, to write his book.

"The Shadow of a Crime" appeared first in serial form in the "Liverpool Mercury," and was published in book form by Chatto & Windus in 1885.

For the book rights Hall Caine received seventy-five pounds (three hundred and seventy-five dollars), which, with the one hundred pounds (five hundred dollars) from the "Liverpool Mercury," is all that he has ever received from a book which is now in its seventeenth edition.

One of the most perfect moated castles in England.] COLCHESTER, ESSEX =How to get there.=Train from Liverpool Street.

=How to get there.=Train from Liverpool Street.

CAMBRIDGE =How to get there.=Train from St. Pancras or Liverpool Street.

THE AVENUE IN SAVERNAKE FOREST.] ELY CATHEDRAL =How to get there.=From Liverpool Street or St. Pancras.

] ST. IVES, HUNTINGDONSHIRE =How to get there.=Train from Liverpool Street or St. Pancras.

=Alternative Route.=Train from Liverpool Street, via Ely.

Liverpool Street.

=How to get there.=Train from Liverpool Street.

Train to Great Yarmouth, Lowestoft, Beccles, Cantley, Reedham, etc., from Liverpool Street, Great Eastern Railway.

] NORWICH CATHEDRAL =How to get there.=Train from Liverpool Station via Colchester.

] BURNHAM THORPE, NORFOLK THE BIRTHPLACE OF NELSON =How to get there.=Train from Liverpool Street or St. Pancras.

Train from Liverpool Street, Great Eastern Railway.

=How to get there.=Train from Liverpool Street or St. Pancras.

1245 examples of  liverpool  in sentences