APA (7th ed.) Citation

Drexel, J., D. L., f. 1., & Marshall, W. (1659). The school of patience in three parts: 1. Shewing the severall kinds of crosses, punishments, and afflictions. 2. The benefit we have by them, as coming from God, in that they teach us: fortitude, fidelity, compassion; abstinence, prayer, mortification, prudence; humility with meeknesse. 3. That all afflictions are to be endured patiently, cheerfully, constantly, and thankfully, with premeditation and conformity to the divine will. Written by Hieren. Drexelius. printed by R. D. and sold by I. Sweeting at the Angel in Popes-head-Alley.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Drexel, Jeremias, fl. 1640 D. L., and William Marshall. The School of Patience in Three Parts: 1. Shewing the Severall Kinds of Crosses, Punishments, and Afflictions. 2. The Benefit We Have by Them, as Coming from God, in That They Teach Us: Fortitude, Fidelity, Compassion; Abstinence, Prayer, Mortification, Prudence; Humility with Meeknesse. 3. That All Afflictions Are to Be Endured Patiently, Cheerfully, Constantly, and Thankfully, with Premeditation and Conformity to the Divine Will. Written by Hieren. Drexelius. London: printed by R. D. and sold by I. Sweeting at the Angel in Popes-head-Alley, 1659.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Drexel, Jeremias, et al. The School of Patience in Three Parts: 1. Shewing the Severall Kinds of Crosses, Punishments, and Afflictions. 2. The Benefit We Have by Them, as Coming from God, in That They Teach Us: Fortitude, Fidelity, Compassion; Abstinence, Prayer, Mortification, Prudence; Humility with Meeknesse. 3. That All Afflictions Are to Be Endured Patiently, Cheerfully, Constantly, and Thankfully, with Premeditation and Conformity to the Divine Will. Written by Hieren. Drexelius. printed by R. D. and sold by I. Sweeting at the Angel in Popes-head-Alley, 1659.

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