Rogers, T. (1597). A pretious booke of heauenlie meditations, called A priuate talke of the soule with God: Which who so zealouslie wil vse and pervse, shall feele in his mind an vnspeakable sweetnes of the euerlasting happines; written (as some thinke) by that reuerend, and religious father S. Augustine; and not translated onlie, but purified also, and with most ample, and necessarie sentences of holie scripture adorned, by Thomas Rogers. By Peter Short, dwelling on Bredstreet hill, at the signe of the Starre.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationRogers, Thomas. A Pretious Booke of Heauenlie Meditations, Called A Priuate Talke of the Soule with God: Which Who so Zealouslie Wil Vse and Pervse, Shall Feele in His Mind an Vnspeakable Sweetnes of the Euerlasting Happines; Written (as Some Thinke) by That Reuerend, and Religious Father S. Augustine; and Not Translated Onlie, but Purified Also, and with Most Ample, and Necessarie Sentences of Holie Scripture Adorned, by Thomas Rogers. Printed at London: By Peter Short, dwelling on Bredstreet hill, at the signe of the Starre, 1597.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationRogers, Thomas. A Pretious Booke of Heauenlie Meditations, Called A Priuate Talke of the Soule with God: Which Who so Zealouslie Wil Vse and Pervse, Shall Feele in His Mind an Vnspeakable Sweetnes of the Euerlasting Happines; Written (as Some Thinke) by That Reuerend, and Religious Father S. Augustine; and Not Translated Onlie, but Purified Also, and with Most Ample, and Necessarie Sentences of Holie Scripture Adorned, by Thomas Rogers. By Peter Short, dwelling on Bredstreet hill, at the signe of the Starre, 1597.