Cicero, M. T., & Newton, T. (1569). The worthye booke of old age othervvyse entituled the elder Cato: Contayning a learned defence and praise of age, and aged men: writen in latine by that father of eloquence Marcus Tullius Cicero, and now englished. VVherunto is annexed a recitall of diuerse men that liued long. With a declaracion of sundrye soortes of yeares, and the diuersitie betwene the yeres in the old time, and our yeares nowe adayes. Anno. 1569. By Thomas Marshe.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationCicero, Marcus Tullius, and Thomas Newton. The Worthye Booke of Old Age Othervvyse Entituled the Elder Cato: Contayning a Learned Defence and Praise of Age, and Aged Men: Writen in Latine by That Father of Eloquence Marcus Tullius Cicero, and Now Englished. VVherunto Is Annexed a Recitall of Diuerse Men That Liued Long. With a Declaracion of Sundrye Soortes of Yeares, and the Diuersitie Betwene the Yeres in the Old Time, and Our Yeares Nowe Adayes. Anno. 1569. Imprinted at London: By Thomas Marshe, 1569.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationCicero, Marcus Tullius, and Thomas Newton. The Worthye Booke of Old Age Othervvyse Entituled the Elder Cato: Contayning a Learned Defence and Praise of Age, and Aged Men: Writen in Latine by That Father of Eloquence Marcus Tullius Cicero, and Now Englished. VVherunto Is Annexed a Recitall of Diuerse Men That Liued Long. With a Declaracion of Sundrye Soortes of Yeares, and the Diuersitie Betwene the Yeres in the Old Time, and Our Yeares Nowe Adayes. Anno. 1569. By Thomas Marshe, 1569.