45 examples of rivington in sentences

Among shorter and more accessible works dealing with the industrial causes of poverty and the application of industrial remedies, Toynbee's Industrial Revolution (Rivington); Gibbins' Industrial History of England (University Extension Series, Methuen & Co.); and Jevons'The State in Relation to Labour (English Citizen Series), will be found most useful.

For a clear understanding of the relation of economic theory to the facts of labour and poverty, J.E. Symes' Political Economy (Rivington), and Marshall's Economies of Industryare specially recommended.

J. T. Arlidge, Hygiene of Occupations (Rivington).

* Toynbee, Industrial Revolution (Rivington).

For H. Woodfall, W. Strahan, J. Rivington, E. Horsfield, G. Keith, W. Nichol, C. and R. Ware, M. Richardson, J. and T. Pote, and T. Burnet.

It was a month after this, simultaneously with the announcements by cable of the instant success in London of "A Western Idyl," that Miss Cuyler retired from the world she knew, and disappeared into darkest New York by the way of Rivington Street.

She found a cruel disappointment at first, for the women of the College Settlement had rules and ideas of their own, and had seen enthusiasts like herself come into Rivington Street before, and depart again.

But it was not until they had reached Orchard Street, and when Rivington Street was quite empty, that the man drew up uncertainly beside the girl, and, bending over, stared up in her face, and then, walking on at her side, surveyed her deliberately from head to foot.

London: printed for J.G. & J. Rivington, St. Paul's Church Yard, and Waterloo Place, Pall Mall.

RIVINGTON, Mr., the bookseller, i. 135, n. 1.

"The Voyages which go under your name Mr. Rivington (whom I consulted on the matter) tells me are only nominally your's, or, at least, were chiefly collected by understrappers.

Mr. Rivington also gives me such an account of the shortness of time in which you wrote the History, as is hardly credible."

The Mr. Rivington referred to in the foregoing extract was probably the well-known New York bookseller, whose press was so obnoxious to the Whigs a few years later.

"No man knows better than Mr. Rivington what time I employed in writing the four first volumes of the History of England; and, indeed, the short period in which that work was finished appears almost incredible to myself, when I recollect that I turned over and consulted above three hundred volumes in the course of my labour.

Mr. Rivington likewise knows that I spent the best part of a year in revising, correcting, and improving the quarto edition; which is now going to press, and will be continued in the same size to the late Peace.

I had engaged with Mr. Rivington, and made some progress in a work exhibiting the present state of the world; which work I shall finish, if I recover my health.

If you should see Mr. Rivington, please give my kindest compliments to him.

Constance R. Earle (W), John G. Winant, Rivington R. Winant & Constance W. Williams (C); 12May75; R615631.

Constance R. Earle (W), John G. Winant, Rivington R. Winant & Constance W. Williams (C); 12May75; R615631.

One of them protested in Rivington's Gazette that 'even robbers, murderers, and rebels are faithful to their fellows and never betray each other,' and another sang, 'Tis an honour to serve the bravest of nations, And be left to be hanged in their capitulations.

London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington.

Mr. Charles Robert Rivington, the present clerk to the Company, has written a pamphlet, full of very interesting records of this ancient and worshipful corporation, from which the following paragraph is a quotation:"The first meeting of the court after the fire was held at Cook's Hall, and the subsequent courts, until the hall was re-built, at the Lame Hospital Hall, i.e., St. Bartholomew's Hospital.

Mr. Rivington read his paper to the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society in 1881; and the writer can with pleasure confirm the statement as to the condition, in 1892, of this fine specimen of seventeenth century work.

In their original state these livery cupboards finished with a straight cornice, the broken pediments with the eagle (the Company's crest) having most probably been added when the hall was, to quote an inscription on a shield, "repaired and beautified in the mayoralty of the Right Honourable William Gill, in the year 1788," when Mr. Thomas Hooke was master, and Mr. Field and Mr. Rivington (the present clerk's grandfather) wardens.

RILEY, JOHN, 20, Harrington Gardens, S.W. RIVINGTON, CHARLES ROBERT, F.S.A., Stationers' Hall, London.

45 examples of  rivington  in sentences