Anonymus, E. (1670). A strange and true relation of the prodigious multitude of mice that have destroyed the plants, herbs, and grasse between Rotterdam and Schedam: Likewise infesting their houses and chambers insomuch that the inhabitants thereof are in despair of their security : wherein you will find a philosophical and historical relation concerning the generation of those vermine and some prognosticks raised there-from : as also an account how Dengy hundred in Essex hath been formerly infested with an incredible number of mice, and how it was freed after a miraculous manner. publisher not identified].
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationAnonymus, Eugenius. A Strange and True Relation of the Prodigious Multitude of Mice That Have Destroyed the Plants, Herbs, and Grasse Between Rotterdam and Schedam: Likewise Infesting Their Houses and Chambers Insomuch That the Inhabitants Thereof Are in Despair of Their Security : Wherein You Will Find a Philosophical and Historical Relation Concerning the Generation of Those Vermine and Some Prognosticks Raised There-from : As Also an Account How Dengy Hundred in Essex Hath Been Formerly Infested with an Incredible Number of Mice, and How It Was Freed After a Miraculous Manner. [London: publisher not identified], 1670.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationAnonymus, Eugenius. A Strange and True Relation of the Prodigious Multitude of Mice That Have Destroyed the Plants, Herbs, and Grasse Between Rotterdam and Schedam: Likewise Infesting Their Houses and Chambers Insomuch That the Inhabitants Thereof Are in Despair of Their Security : Wherein You Will Find a Philosophical and Historical Relation Concerning the Generation of Those Vermine and Some Prognosticks Raised There-from : As Also an Account How Dengy Hundred in Essex Hath Been Formerly Infested with an Incredible Number of Mice, and How It Was Freed After a Miraculous Manner. publisher not identified], 1670.