Stubbe, H. (1671). An epistolary discourse concerning phlebotomy: In opposition to G. Thomson pseudo-chymist, a pretended disciple of the Lord Verulam : wherein the nature of the blood, and the effects of blood-letting, are enquired into, and the practice thereof experimentally justified (according as it is used by judicious physicians) : [bracket] in the pest, and pestilential diseases, in the small pox, in the scurvey, in pleurisies, and in several other diseases. [publisher not identified].
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationStubbe, Henry. An Epistolary Discourse Concerning Phlebotomy: In Opposition to G. Thomson Pseudo-chymist, a Pretended Disciple of the Lord Verulam : Wherein the Nature of the Blood, and the Effects of Blood-letting, Are Enquired into, and the Practice Thereof Experimentally Justified (according as It Is Used by Judicious Physicians) : [bracket] in the Pest, and Pestilential Diseases, in the Small Pox, in the Scurvey, in Pleurisies, and in Several Other Diseases. [London]: [publisher not identified], 1671.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationStubbe, Henry. An Epistolary Discourse Concerning Phlebotomy: In Opposition to G. Thomson Pseudo-chymist, a Pretended Disciple of the Lord Verulam : Wherein the Nature of the Blood, and the Effects of Blood-letting, Are Enquired into, and the Practice Thereof Experimentally Justified (according as It Is Used by Judicious Physicians) : [bracket] in the Pest, and Pestilential Diseases, in the Small Pox, in the Scurvey, in Pleurisies, and in Several Other Diseases. [publisher not identified], 1671.