Bradley, T., & Bulkley, S. (1672). Elijah's nunc dimittis, or, The authors own funeral sermons: In his meditations upon I Kings 19.4. it is now enough, Lord take away my soule, for I am no better then [sic] my fathers : where also is treated, of the immortality of the soule, of the state of it, when separate from the body, of the destruction of this lower world by fire, of local hell, with the gradual torments thereof, of the heavens, of the superiour world, and the inhabitants of them, their happiness, and glory : together with Elijah's epitaph (The second impression, corrected and enlarged by the author.). Printed by Stephen Bulkley at the Cross Swords in Stonegate.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationBradley, Thomas, and Stephen Bulkley. Elijah's Nunc Dimittis, or, The Authors Own Funeral Sermons: In His Meditations upon I Kings 19.4. It Is Now Enough, Lord Take Away My Soule, for I Am No Better Then [sic] My Fathers : Where Also Is Treated, of the Immortality of the Soule, of the State of It, When Separate from the Body, of the Destruction of This Lower World by Fire, of Local Hell, with the Gradual Torments Thereof, of the Heavens, of the Superiour World, and the Inhabitants of Them, Their Happiness, and Glory : Together with Elijah's Epitaph. The second impression, corrected and enlarged by the author. York: Printed by Stephen Bulkley at the Cross Swords in Stonegate, 1672.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationBradley, Thomas, and Stephen Bulkley. Elijah's Nunc Dimittis, or, The Authors Own Funeral Sermons: In His Meditations upon I Kings 19.4. It Is Now Enough, Lord Take Away My Soule, for I Am No Better Then [sic] My Fathers : Where Also Is Treated, of the Immortality of the Soule, of the State of It, When Separate from the Body, of the Destruction of This Lower World by Fire, of Local Hell, with the Gradual Torments Thereof, of the Heavens, of the Superiour World, and the Inhabitants of Them, Their Happiness, and Glory : Together with Elijah's Epitaph. The second impression, corrected and enlarged by the author. Printed by Stephen Bulkley at the Cross Swords in Stonegate, 1672.