APA (7th ed.) Citation

Regulus. (1773). To the freemen of Pennsylvania: My countrymen and fellow-citizens, The day is at length arrived, in which we must determine to live as freemen--or as slaves, to linger out a miserable existence. The tea-ship will, in all probability, be in a few hours at anchor in our harbour; and unless we exert ourselves against the introduction of her cargo, it will be landed; and if landed, it will be made use of, as a precedent of right to enslave our country to all eternity. .. [publisher not identified].

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Regulus. To the Freemen of Pennsylvania: My Countrymen and Fellow-citizens, The Day Is at Length Arrived, in Which We Must Determine to Live as Freemen--or as Slaves, to Linger Out a Miserable Existence. The Tea-ship Will, in All Probability, Be in a Few Hours at Anchor in Our Harbour; and Unless We Exert Ourselves Against the Introduction of Her Cargo, It Will Be Landed; and If Landed, It Will Be Made Use of, as a Precedent of Right to Enslave Our Country to All Eternity. .. [Philadelphia]: [publisher not identified], 1773.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Regulus. To the Freemen of Pennsylvania: My Countrymen and Fellow-citizens, The Day Is at Length Arrived, in Which We Must Determine to Live as Freemen--or as Slaves, to Linger Out a Miserable Existence. The Tea-ship Will, in All Probability, Be in a Few Hours at Anchor in Our Harbour; and Unless We Exert Ourselves Against the Introduction of Her Cargo, It Will Be Landed; and If Landed, It Will Be Made Use of, as a Precedent of Right to Enslave Our Country to All Eternity. .. [publisher not identified], 1773.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.