The twenty-third edition, revised, of an essay, on the nature and cure of scrophulous disorders : Commonly called the king's evil; deduced from long observation and practice. With additions. And above sixty cases; the remedies in them used and occasional remarks. To which is prefixed, a coloured plate of the herb vervain, and its root. Published for the good of mankind; particularly the common people. By John Morley, Esq. of Halstead in Essex.
MLA
Morley, John. The twenty-third edition, revised, of an essay, on the nature and cure of scrophulous disorders : Commonly called the king's evil; deduced from long observation and practice. With additions. And above sixty cases; the remedies in them used and occasional remarks. To which is prefixed, a coloured plate of the herb vervain, and its root. Published for the good of mankind; particularly the common people. By John Morley, Esq. of Halstead in Essex. London : Printed for James Buckland, at the Buck, in Pater-noster-Row, 1785.
APA
Morley, J. (1785). The twenty-third edition, revised, of an essay, on the nature and cure of scrophulous disorders : Commonly called the king's evil; deduced from long observation and practice. With additions. And above sixty cases; the remedies in them used and occasional remarks. To which is prefixed, a coloured plate of the herb vervain, and its root. Published for the good of mankind; particularly the common people. By John Morley, Esq. of Halstead in Essex. London : Printed for James Buckland, at the Buck, in Pater-noster-Row.
Chicago
Morley, John. The twenty-third edition, revised, of an essay, on the nature and cure of scrophulous disorders : Commonly called the king's evil; deduced from long observation and practice. With additions. And above sixty cases; the remedies in them used and occasional remarks. To which is prefixed, a coloured plate of the herb vervain, and its root. Published for the good of mankind; particularly the common people. By John Morley, Esq. of Halstead in Essex. London : Printed for James Buckland, at the Buck, in Pater-noster-Row, 1785.