Rowlands, S. (1673). Well met gossip: or, Tis merry when gossips meet..: [ne]wly enlarged, with very merry songs, pleasant for maids, wives, and widdows and delightfull to all that shall read it ([Ne]wly enlarged, with very merry songs, pleasant for maids, wives, and widdows and delightfull to all that shall read it.). [Pri]nted for Tho. Vere and are to be sold at the Sign of the Angel without Newgate.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationRowlands, Samuel. Well Met Gossip: Or, Tis Merry When Gossips Meet..: [ne]wly Enlarged, with Very Merry Songs, Pleasant for Maids, Wives, and Widdows and Delightfull to All That Shall Read It. [Ne]wly enlarged, with very merry songs, pleasant for maids, wives, and widdows and delightfull to all that shall read it. London: [Pri]nted for Tho. Vere and are to be sold at the Sign of the Angel without Newgate, 1673.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationRowlands, Samuel. Well Met Gossip: Or, Tis Merry When Gossips Meet..: [ne]wly Enlarged, with Very Merry Songs, Pleasant for Maids, Wives, and Widdows and Delightfull to All That Shall Read It. [Ne]wly enlarged, with very merry songs, pleasant for maids, wives, and widdows and delightfull to all that shall read it. [Pri]nted for Tho. Vere and are to be sold at the Sign of the Angel without Newgate, 1673.