APA (7th ed.) Citation

Bache, A. (1640). The voyce of the Lord in the Temple, or, A most strange and wonderfull relation of Gods great power, providence, and mercy: In sending very strange sounds, fires, and a fiery ball into the church of Anthony in Cornwall neere Plimmouth, on Whitsunday last, 1640, to the scorching and astonishing of 14 severall persons who were smitten, and likewise to the great terrour of all the other people then present, being about 200 persons. By T.P. for Francis Eglesfield, and are to be sold by William Russell Bookeseller in Plimmoth.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Bache, Arthur. The Voyce of the Lord in the Temple, or, A Most Strange and Wonderfull Relation of Gods Great Power, Providence, and Mercy: In Sending Very Strange Sounds, Fires, and a Fiery Ball into the Church of Anthony in Cornwall Neere Plimmouth, on Whitsunday Last, 1640, to the Scorching and Astonishing of 14 Severall Persons Who Were Smitten, and Likewise to the Great Terrour of All the Other People Then Present, Being About 200 Persons. Imprinted at London: By T.P. for Francis Eglesfield, and are to be sold by William Russell Bookeseller in Plimmoth, 1640.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Bache, Arthur. The Voyce of the Lord in the Temple, or, A Most Strange and Wonderfull Relation of Gods Great Power, Providence, and Mercy: In Sending Very Strange Sounds, Fires, and a Fiery Ball into the Church of Anthony in Cornwall Neere Plimmouth, on Whitsunday Last, 1640, to the Scorching and Astonishing of 14 Severall Persons Who Were Smitten, and Likewise to the Great Terrour of All the Other People Then Present, Being About 200 Persons. By T.P. for Francis Eglesfield, and are to be sold by William Russell Bookeseller in Plimmoth, 1640.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.