APA (7th ed.) Citation

Taylor, J. (1645). Aquamusæ: or, Cacafogo, cacadæmon, Captain George Wither wrung in the withers: Being a short lashing satyre, wherein the juggling rebell is compendiously finely firked and jerked, for his late railing pamphlet against the King and state, called Campo-musæ. By John Taylor. Printed [by L. Lichfield].

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Taylor, John. Aquamusæ: Or, Cacafogo, Cacadæmon, Captain George Wither Wrung in the Withers: Being a Short Lashing Satyre, Wherein the Juggling Rebell Is Compendiously Finely Firked and Jerked, for His Late Railing Pamphlet Against the King and State, Called Campo-musæ. By John Taylor. [Oxford]: Printed [by L. Lichfield], 1645.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Taylor, John. Aquamusæ: Or, Cacafogo, Cacadæmon, Captain George Wither Wrung in the Withers: Being a Short Lashing Satyre, Wherein the Juggling Rebell Is Compendiously Finely Firked and Jerked, for His Late Railing Pamphlet Against the King and State, Called Campo-musæ. By John Taylor. Printed [by L. Lichfield], 1645.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.