ECU Libraries Catalog
Publick good without private interest, or A compendious remonstrance of the present sad state and condition of the English colonie in Virginea : with a modest declaration of the severall causes (so far as by the rules of right, reason, and religious observation may be collected) why it hath not prospered better hitherto : as also, a submissive suggestion of the most prudentiall probable wayes, and meanes, both divine and civill (that the inexpert remembrancer could for the present recail to minde) for its happyer improvement and advancement for the future
MLA
Gatford, Lionel. Publick Good Without Private Interest, Or A Compendious Remonstrance of the Present Sad State and Condition of the English Colonie In Virginea : with a Modest Declaration of the Severall Causes (so Far As by the Rules of Right, Reason, and Religious Observation May Be Collected) Why it Hath Not Prospered Better Hitherto : As Also, a Submissive Suggestion of the Most Prudentiall Probable Wayes, and Meanes, Both Divine and Civill (that the Inexpert Remembrancer Could for the Present Recail to Minde) for Its Happyer Improvement and Advancement for the Future. Vienne: F. Köke pour la Libraire Tross à Paris, 1866.
APA
Gatford, L. (1866). Publick good without private interest, or A compendious remonstrance of the present sad state and condition of the English colonie in Virginea : with a modest declaration of the severall causes (so far as by the rules of right, reason, and religious observation may be collected) why it hath not prospered better hitherto : as also, a submissive suggestion of the most prudentiall probable wayes, and meanes, both divine and civill (that the inexpert remembrancer could for the present recail to minde) for its happyer improvement and advancement for the future. Vienne: F. Köke pour la Libraire Tross à Paris.
Chicago
Gatford, Lionel, Publick Good without Private Interest, Or A Compendious Remonstrance of the Present Sad State and Condition of the English Colonie In Virginea: With a Modest Declaration of the Severall Causes (so Far As by the Rules of Right, Reason, and Religious Observation May Be Collected) Why it Hath Not Prospered Better Hitherto : As Also, a Submissive Suggestion of the Most Prudentiall Probable Wayes, and Meanes, Both Divine and Civill (that the Inexpert Remembrancer Could for the Present Recail to Minde) for Its Happyer Improvement and Advancement for the Future. Vienne: F. Köke pour la Libraire Tross à Paris, 1866.