Steele, R., & Addison, J. (1709). The Tatler's character (July 21.) of s̆culapius guessing diseases, without the knowledge of drugs: Apply'd to the British physicians and surgeons: Or, the difficult diseases of the royal family, nobility and gentry will never be understood and recover'd, when the populace are oppress'd and destroy'd by the practising-apothecaries and empiricks, confess'd by the college and Mr. Bernard the surgeon. By a consultation of Gentlemen of Quality. Printed for M. Wotton, at the three daggers in Fleet street.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationSteele, Richard, and Joseph Addison. The Tatler's Character (July 21.) of S̆culapius Guessing Diseases, Without the Knowledge of Drugs: Apply'd to the British Physicians and Surgeons: Or, the Difficult Diseases of the Royal Family, Nobility and Gentry Will Never Be Understood and Recover'd, When the Populace Are Oppress'd and Destroy'd by the Practising-apothecaries and Empiricks, Confess'd by the College and Mr. Bernard the Surgeon. By a Consultation of Gentlemen of Quality. London: Printed for M. Wotton, at the three daggers in Fleet street, 1709.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationSteele, Richard, and Joseph Addison. The Tatler's Character (July 21.) of S̆culapius Guessing Diseases, Without the Knowledge of Drugs: Apply'd to the British Physicians and Surgeons: Or, the Difficult Diseases of the Royal Family, Nobility and Gentry Will Never Be Understood and Recover'd, When the Populace Are Oppress'd and Destroy'd by the Practising-apothecaries and Empiricks, Confess'd by the College and Mr. Bernard the Surgeon. By a Consultation of Gentlemen of Quality. Printed for M. Wotton, at the three daggers in Fleet street, 1709.