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A60776 A rebuke to the authors of a blew-book call'd, The state of physick in London which is indeed the black and blew state of physick, dated from the college, and signed by Th. G. and R.M. / written in behalf of the apothecaries and chirurgians of the city of London by William Salmon ... Salmon, William, 1644-1713. 1698 (1698) Wing S449; ESTC R22575 28,636 34

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of the Rich and good reason too because those are the only Persons which can feed them liberally and give them often and large Fees and therefore in Gratitude tho' they be otherwise ill-natured Fellows enough they ought to wish them well However this they prudently leave to the wisdom of the Parliament and so do I and all those good People whom they have basely Abused and Persecuted against all Law Justice and Right And hope the Parliament will look into the Matter and resolve us by their Votes and a peculiar Act for that purpose that all Forms of Acts of Parliament not having the Royal Assent shall be holden for no Law and indeed it ought to be accounted no less than high Treason to judge any Subject of England by any Form of an Act not ratified by the Royal Power of some King or Queen of England for by such Practises they that so judge assume the Royal Power of making Laws subvert Justice and overturn the very Foundations of our Government And I doubt not but when the Parliament shall look into this matter and find this Form of an Act without the Royal Assent annexed to it as I have said that they will take care likewise that all Judgments formerly past by virtue thereof may be reverst and where Execution has been made that the Blew-Book-Fellows may be made to refund or repay to those Persons so abused if alive or to their Heirs Executors or Administrators the whole value so taken away with the Interest thereof for so many years as they have unjustly kept it and that a compleat Satisfaction may be made to those Persons to the utmost penny of their Damages XIX Blew-Book We give here a short account of the Charitable Method which the College of Physicians after several years Consideration has lately thought of and used to provide the poor with Medicines cheaper than has hitherto been ever practised in any Country page 13. Salmon Here 's brags of Charity indeed but what does it amount to Truly only to this that if poor People have any Money they may have Medicines of them for it but if they have no Money positively they must go without and this without any Circumlocution is the downright sense of the matter Now if the Blew-Book-men can thus impudently interlope into the Apothecaries Trade by dispensing the Medicaments they prescribe endeavouring their Ruine and Undoing Why should it not be as just for the Apothecaries to study the Art of Prescription and turn Doctors and so Prescribe their own Medicines which they dispense I think it is no sin in the Apothecaries to make the Case as broad as the Doctors have made it long But they will tell you that the Poor shall have Medicines cheaper than 〈◊〉 … therto been ever prastised in any Country How shall I or any poor Body know that Why they tell you so and you are bound in Conscience to believe them Now I cannot tell that for tho' it may be possible to be true yet it is not probable that it is true and the reason I have for it is this that I have taken them in so many Lies and manifest Falsities in this Book which I my self know to be so that I cannot tell when to believe them and I cannot help it for my Life the believing all they say to be false unless I know it my self before-hand to be true and indeed this is that which common Lyars get by such assiduous telling of Lies that no Body can believe them when they speak Truth But they say this Method after many years Consideration they have lately thought of so it seems they have been but lately thinking of it yet it has been many years under their Consideration All that long time they thought nothing at all of it they are the only Men in the World then that I know of that can consider with themselves for many years without thinking of the matter they consider of This is a Bull all over what pity is it that Men of their Stations should be able to write no better English XX. Blew-Book The President Censors and Majority of the Members c. pitying the miserable Condition poor Patients were in for want of Remedies agreed that Medicines should be prepared at the College and given at the Poor at the prime Cost p. 14. To relieve the Poor for ever with Medicines at the Intrinsick Value page 15. Salmon Here 's a great Cry and a little Wool as the Devil said when he shore his Hogs Here is a wonderful pitying the Poor for want of Remedies and therefore they say that Medicines shall be prepared and given to the prime Cost and this prime Cost they declare to be the intrinsick Value It is an odd thing that such Men as they are cannot write good English without making so many Bulls in it how are their Medicines given to the Poor when they only sell them and will let no Body have them without Money And what does all this noise of Charity amount to but only what I said before viz. that if poor People bring Money with them they may have Medicines but not otherwise But they will give their Advice Gratis Who knows that or what Security have we that they will keep their word and not bring it into their Intrinsick Value And if they should do it what is it worth especially when poor People have not Money by them to buy Bread or other Necessaries Something I spoke to this Head in an Advertisement I gave about the Town and I hear the Blades found fault with it that I begun my Observations about Intrinsick Value with Item and not with Imprimis now the reason of that was because I could do no otherwise that being taken out of the middle of the Account But in this place I care not greatly if I give you the Imprimis which is so much for loosing our certain Practise and trusting to an uncertainty in Degrading our selves by turning Apothecaries out of meer spight and malice to the Trade because we would have six hundred Families be turned out a-doors and sent a Grazing or Begging Item so much for half a Dozen Bottles of Claret after the Company had drunk enough upon Consideration that it ought to be put into the Intrinsick Value for that they were then met about the Concerns of the Business Item so much for debasing the College by turning it into a Mechanick-SHOP against the Honour and Dignity of the Place Item so much for the Price of the Drugs Item so much for Waste in making up Item so much for Laboratory Room Item so much for the Use of the Weights Item so much for the Use of the Scales Item so much for Dispensing the Ingredients Item so much for the Use of the Pestle Item so much for the Use of the Mortar Item so much for Preparing them Item so much for SHOP-room Item so much for Servants Wages Item so much for the Interest of their Money