Egerton, S. (1617). A briefe methode of catechizing: Wherein are handled these foure points: 1. How miserable all men are by nature. 2. What remedie God hath appointed for their deliuerance. 3. How they must liue that are deliuered. 4. What helps they must vse to that end. The same points are also contracted, and a forme of examining communicants added; with graces before and after meate (The 26. edition, newly perused and amended by the author.). Imprinted by Felix Kyngston, for Henry Fetherstone, dvvelling in Pauls Churchyard at the signe of the Rose.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationEgerton, Stephen. A Briefe Methode of Catechizing: Wherein Are Handled These Foure Points: 1. How Miserable All Men Are by Nature. 2. What Remedie God Hath Appointed for Their Deliuerance. 3. How They Must Liue That Are Deliuered. 4. What Helps They Must Vse to That End. The Same Points Are Also Contracted, and a Forme of Examining Communicants Added; with Graces Before and After Meate. The 26. edition, newly perused and amended by the author. London: Imprinted by Felix Kyngston, for Henry Fetherstone, dvvelling in Pauls Churchyard at the signe of the Rose, 1617.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationEgerton, Stephen. A Briefe Methode of Catechizing: Wherein Are Handled These Foure Points: 1. How Miserable All Men Are by Nature. 2. What Remedie God Hath Appointed for Their Deliuerance. 3. How They Must Liue That Are Deliuered. 4. What Helps They Must Vse to That End. The Same Points Are Also Contracted, and a Forme of Examining Communicants Added; with Graces Before and After Meate. The 26. edition, newly perused and amended by the author. Imprinted by Felix Kyngston, for Henry Fetherstone, dvvelling in Pauls Churchyard at the signe of the Rose, 1617.