(1641). The Stage-players complaint: In a pleasant dialogue betweene Cane of the Fortune, and Reed of the Friers, deploring their sad and solitary conditions for want of imployment, in this heavie and contagious time of the plague in London. Printed for Tho. Bates ....
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationThe Stage-players Complaint: In a Pleasant Dialogue Betweene Cane of the Fortune, and Reed of the Friers, Deploring Their Sad and Solitary Conditions for Want of Imployment, in This Heavie and Contagious Time of the Plague in London. London: Printed for Tho. Bates ..., 1641.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationThe Stage-players Complaint: In a Pleasant Dialogue Betweene Cane of the Fortune, and Reed of the Friers, Deploring Their Sad and Solitary Conditions for Want of Imployment, in This Heavie and Contagious Time of the Plague in London. Printed for Tho. Bates ..., 1641.