Crab, R. (1655). The English hermite, or, Wonder of this age: Being a relation of the life of Roger Crab, living near Uxbridg, taken from his own mouth, shewing his strange, reserved, and unparallel'd kind of life, who counteth it a sin against his body and soule to eate any sort of flesh...or to drink any wine...he left the army and kept a shop at Chesham, and hath now left off that, and sold a considerable estate to give to the poore, shewing his reasons from the Scripture. [s.n.].
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationCrab, Roger. The English Hermite, or, Wonder of This Age: Being a Relation of the Life of Roger Crab, Living Near Uxbridg, Taken from His Own Mouth, Shewing His Strange, Reserved, and Unparallel'd Kind of Life, Who Counteth It a Sin Against His Body and Soule to Eate Any Sort of Flesh...or to Drink Any Wine...he Left the Army and Kept a Shop at Chesham, and Hath Now Left off That, and Sold a Considerable Estate to Give to the Poore, Shewing His Reasons from the Scripture. London: [s.n.], 1655.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationCrab, Roger. The English Hermite, or, Wonder of This Age: Being a Relation of the Life of Roger Crab, Living Near Uxbridg, Taken from His Own Mouth, Shewing His Strange, Reserved, and Unparallel'd Kind of Life, Who Counteth It a Sin Against His Body and Soule to Eate Any Sort of Flesh...or to Drink Any Wine...he Left the Army and Kept a Shop at Chesham, and Hath Now Left off That, and Sold a Considerable Estate to Give to the Poore, Shewing His Reasons from the Scripture. [s.n.], 1655.