Tutchin, J. 1. (1702). The British muse: or tyranny expos'd: A satyr, occasion'd by all the fulsom and lying poems and elegies, that have been written on the death of the late King James. printed for Eliz. Mallet, and sold by the Williamite book-sellers of London and Dublin, who are haters of tyranny and slavery.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationTutchin, John 1661?-1707. The British Muse: Or Tyranny Expos'd: A Satyr, Occasion'd by All the Fulsom and Lying Poems and Elegies, That Have Been Written on the Death of the Late King James. London [i.e. Dublin?]: printed for Eliz. Mallet, and sold by the Williamite book-sellers of London and Dublin, who are haters of tyranny and slavery, 1702.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationTutchin, John 1661?-1707. The British Muse: Or Tyranny Expos'd: A Satyr, Occasion'd by All the Fulsom and Lying Poems and Elegies, That Have Been Written on the Death of the Late King James. printed for Eliz. Mallet, and sold by the Williamite book-sellers of London and Dublin, who are haters of tyranny and slavery, 1702.