Nicholas Ling fl. (1770). Antiquity; or the wise instructer. Being a collection of the most valuable admonitions and sentences, compendiously put together, from an infinite Variety of the most celebrated Christian and heathen writers, Divine, Moral, Historical, Poetical, and Political. printed for J. Brooks, the editor, by S. Farley, in Castle-Green.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationNicholas Ling fl. Antiquity; or the Wise Instructer. Being a Collection of the Most Valuable Admonitions and Sentences, Compendiously Put Together, from an Infinite Variety of the Most Celebrated Christian and Heathen Writers, Divine, Moral, Historical, Poetical, and Political. Bristol: printed for J. Brooks, the editor, by S. Farley, in Castle-Green, 1770.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationNicholas Ling fl. Antiquity; or the Wise Instructer. Being a Collection of the Most Valuable Admonitions and Sentences, Compendiously Put Together, from an Infinite Variety of the Most Celebrated Christian and Heathen Writers, Divine, Moral, Historical, Poetical, and Political. printed for J. Brooks, the editor, by S. Farley, in Castle-Green, 1770.