Booker, J. (1644). A rope treble-twisted for John Tayler the water-poet: Or rather for his malignant friends in London which make use of his name to slander and abuse the Parliament, and well-affected party, in their pernicious pamphlets, and particularly Mr. John Booker, a man of known honesty and one who scornes to calculate for the meridian of Oxford. Printed ... for G. Bishop.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationBooker, John. A Rope Treble-twisted for John Tayler the Water-poet: Or Rather for His Malignant Friends in London Which Make Use of His Name to Slander and Abuse the Parliament, and Well-affected Party, in Their Pernicious Pamphlets, and Particularly Mr. John Booker, a Man of Known Honesty and One Who Scornes to Calculate for the Meridian of Oxford. London: Printed ... for G. Bishop, 1644.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationBooker, John. A Rope Treble-twisted for John Tayler the Water-poet: Or Rather for His Malignant Friends in London Which Make Use of His Name to Slander and Abuse the Parliament, and Well-affected Party, in Their Pernicious Pamphlets, and Particularly Mr. John Booker, a Man of Known Honesty and One Who Scornes to Calculate for the Meridian of Oxford. Printed ... for G. Bishop, 1644.