Which preposition to use with apothecary
Some persons cut this mistletoe for some apothecaries in London, and sold them a quantity for ten shillings each time, and left only one branch remaining for more to sprout out.
A countryman, who supplied the apothecaries of the place, was his first master, and was paid by him for his instructions with the little money that he could procure, or that which was given him to buy something to eat after dinner.
the apothecary from' 'Is it straight on?' 'Ay, to be sure, straight onand the apothecary from Corsham, as I was saying, he said, said he, as soon as he saw her'
Barron Field was a son of Henry Field, apothecary to Christ's Hospital.
A doctor at one elbow, and an apothecary at the other, and the poor soul labouring under their prescribed operations, he need no worse tormentors.
An instantaneous indignation against Doctor Keene set the face of the speechless apothecary on fire, and this, being as instantaneously comprehended by the philosophe, was the best of introductions.
It is a better and a wiser thing," it commented, "to be a starved apothecary than a starved poet; so back to the shop, Mr. John, back to 'plasters, pills and ointment boxes.'"
The Devil's in't, if either the Doctor, my Master, or Mopsophil, know me in this DisguiseAnd thus I may not only gain my Mistress, and out-wit Harlequin, but deliver the Ladies those Letters from their Lovers, which I took out of his Pocket this Morning; and who wou'd suspect an Apothecary for a Pimp?Nor can the Jade Mopsophil, in Honour, refuse a Person of my Gravity, and so well set up.
Dudley I seem to have heard that apothecaries like jelloes.
"Go for Bishop Wright and tell him to bring that apothecary with him.
"That is my cousin, with the carriage," said M. Grandissime, following the apothecary into the shop.
He found the apothecary among his clerks, preparing with his own hands the "chalybeate tonic" for which the f.m.c. was expected to call.
On recovering from my stupor, I found myself with a physician and two apothecaries beside me, in bed at the George Inn, Ramsgate.
[Footnote 4: "The Dispensary" was a poem by a physician named Garth, to advocate the cause of the physicians in a quarrel between them and the apothecaries about the price to be charged for medicines.
This plate has long been known in the shop of the apothecary under the name of Cuttle-fish bone: an observant reader may have noticed scores of these plates in glasses labelled Os Sepiae.