Johnson, R., & Purslowe, G. (1668). The most pleasant history of Tom A Lincoln, that ever renowned souldier, the Red-Rose Knight: Who for his valour and chivalry, was sir-named the boast of England : shewing his honourable victories in forraign countries, with his strange fortunes in the fairy-land: and how he married the fair Anglitora, daughter to Prester John, that renowned monarch of the vvorld : together with the lives and deaths of his two famous sons, the Black Knight, and the Fairy Knight, with divers other memorable accidents, fulll of delight (The tenth impression.). Printed by G. Purslow, for F. Coles, on Saffron-Hill, in Wine-Street, neer Hatten-Garden.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationJohnson, Richard, and George Purslowe. The Most Pleasant History of Tom A Lincoln, That Ever Renowned Souldier, the Red-Rose Knight: Who for His Valour and Chivalry, Was Sir-named the Boast of England : Shewing His Honourable Victories in Forraign Countries, with His Strange Fortunes in the Fairy-land: And How He Married the Fair Anglitora, Daughter to Prester John, That Renowned Monarch of the Vvorld : Together with the Lives and Deaths of His Two Famous Sons, the Black Knight, and the Fairy Knight, with Divers Other Memorable Accidents, Fulll of Delight. The tenth impression. London: Printed by G. Purslow, for F. Coles, on Saffron-Hill, in Wine-Street, neer Hatten-Garden, 1668.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationJohnson, Richard, and George Purslowe. The Most Pleasant History of Tom A Lincoln, That Ever Renowned Souldier, the Red-Rose Knight: Who for His Valour and Chivalry, Was Sir-named the Boast of England : Shewing His Honourable Victories in Forraign Countries, with His Strange Fortunes in the Fairy-land: And How He Married the Fair Anglitora, Daughter to Prester John, That Renowned Monarch of the Vvorld : Together with the Lives and Deaths of His Two Famous Sons, the Black Knight, and the Fairy Knight, with Divers Other Memorable Accidents, Fulll of Delight. The tenth impression. Printed by G. Purslow, for F. Coles, on Saffron-Hill, in Wine-Street, neer Hatten-Garden, 1668.