Which preposition to use with cauldron

of Occurrences 29%

And they went, leaving behind them a boiling cauldron of theory and conjecture.

in Occurrences 6%

There is even a suspicion in yousuch is your distemperthat it is too much a witch's cauldron in the kitchen, "eye of newt, and toe of frog," and you spy and poke upon your food.

on Occurrences 2%

Can we fancy that sleeping mirror the same boiling cauldron on which we were so lately tossed, helpless and nearly hopeless?" "Hopeless, Sigismund, but for thee!"

over Occurrences 2%

About five yards on the right, Mr. Petulengro was busily employed in erecting his tent; he held in his hand an iron bar, sharp at the bottom, with a kind of arm projecting from the top for the purpose of supporting a kettle or cauldron over the fire.

at Occurrences 2%

Unless the Laughing Lass could recover before the squall had driven her to leeward a scant half mile, we should be cooked alive in the boiling cauldron at the shore's edge.

within Occurrences 2%

The sun beats upon the shelterless town until it becomes a great cauldron within its amphitheatre of hills.

like Occurrences 1%

He brewed a cauldron like that of Macbeth's witches, and from it arose the images of crowned kings.

from Occurrences 1%

The largest spring is fifteen to eighteen feet in diameter, and the water boils up like a cauldron from 18 to 30 inches, and one instinctively draws back from the edge as the hot sulphur steam rises around him.

into Occurrences 1%

Some are boiling cauldrons into which the unwary fall now and again to meet a death terrible, yetif the dying words of some of them may be believednot always agonizing, so completely does the shock of contact with the boiling water kill the nervous system.

around Occurrences 1%

Places which were usually white with the foam of breakers, could not now be distinguished from any of the raging cauldron around them, and it was evident that Bob must run at hazard.

to Occurrences 1%

Its two diameters are about twelve feet and twenty feet, and it has an indented border of seemingly pure sulphur, about two feet wide and extending down into the spring or cauldron to the edge of the water, which at the time of our visit, if it had been at rest, would have been fifteen or eighteen inches below the rim of the spring.

Which preposition to use with  cauldron