Philomusus, f. 1. (1645). The academy of complements: Wherein ladies, gentlewomen, schollers, and strangers may accommodate their courtly practice with gentile ceremonies, complementall amorous high expressions, and formes of speaking or writing of letters most in fashion. A worke perused, exactly perfected, every where corrected and inriched, by the author, with additions of witty poems, and pleasant songs (The sixt edition, with two tables, the one expounding the most hard English words, the other resolving the most delightfull fictions of the heathen poets.). printed by T. Badger, for H. Mosley, and are to be sold at his shop at the Princes Armes in Pauls Church-yard.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationPhilomusus, fl. 1640. The Academy of Complements: Wherein Ladies, Gentlewomen, Schollers, and Strangers May Accommodate Their Courtly Practice with Gentile Ceremonies, Complementall Amorous High Expressions, and Formes of Speaking or Writing of Letters Most in Fashion. A Worke Perused, Exactly Perfected, Every Where Corrected and Inriched, by the Author, with Additions of Witty Poems, and Pleasant Songs. The sixt edition, with two tables, the one expounding the most hard English words, the other resolving the most delightfull fictions of the heathen poets. London: printed by T. Badger, for H. Mosley, and are to be sold at his shop at the Princes Armes in Pauls Church-yard, 1645.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationPhilomusus, fl. 1640. The Academy of Complements: Wherein Ladies, Gentlewomen, Schollers, and Strangers May Accommodate Their Courtly Practice with Gentile Ceremonies, Complementall Amorous High Expressions, and Formes of Speaking or Writing of Letters Most in Fashion. A Worke Perused, Exactly Perfected, Every Where Corrected and Inriched, by the Author, with Additions of Witty Poems, and Pleasant Songs. The sixt edition, with two tables, the one expounding the most hard English words, the other resolving the most delightfull fictions of the heathen poets. printed by T. Badger, for H. Mosley, and are to be sold at his shop at the Princes Armes in Pauls Church-yard, 1645.