Billingsley, M. (1641). The pen's excellencie, or, The secretaries delight: Wherein aswell the abuses wch are offered vnto ye worthines of ye pen by unworthie pen men are trulie dicovered, and ye dignity of ye art it self by ye antiquitie, excellencie & diversitie thereof is breifly demonstrated : together with an insertion of sondrie peeces, or examples, of all ye vsuall hands of England : as also an addition of certaine methodicall observations for writing, making of the pen, holding the pen, &c. Are to be solde by Wilham Humble.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationBillingsley, Martin. The Pen's Excellencie, or, The Secretaries Delight: Wherein Aswell the Abuses Wch Are Offered Vnto Ye Worthines of Ye Pen by Unworthie Pen Men Are Trulie Dicovered, and Ye Dignity of Ye Art It Self by Ye Antiquitie, Excellencie & Diversitie Thereof Is Breifly Demonstrated : Together with an Insertion of Sondrie Peeces, or Examples, of All Ye Vsuall Hands of England : As Also an Addition of Certaine Methodicall Observations for Writing, Making of the Pen, Holding the Pen, &c. [London]: Are to be solde by Wilham Humble, 1641.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationBillingsley, Martin. The Pen's Excellencie, or, The Secretaries Delight: Wherein Aswell the Abuses Wch Are Offered Vnto Ye Worthines of Ye Pen by Unworthie Pen Men Are Trulie Dicovered, and Ye Dignity of Ye Art It Self by Ye Antiquitie, Excellencie & Diversitie Thereof Is Breifly Demonstrated : Together with an Insertion of Sondrie Peeces, or Examples, of All Ye Vsuall Hands of England : As Also an Addition of Certaine Methodicall Observations for Writing, Making of the Pen, Holding the Pen, &c. Are to be solde by Wilham Humble, 1641.