Jeanne, d. l. N. The Folly and vanity of a life spent in the pursuit of worldly profit, ease, or pleasure, compared with a life wholly employed in endeavouring to glorify God, and do good to mankind: Illustrated in some account of the pious lady Elizabeth Hastings, and of Armelle Nicolas, a poor ignorant country maid in France, commonly known by the name of the Good Armelle. : [Five lines of quotation].
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationJeanne, de la Nativité. The Folly and Vanity of a Life Spent in the Pursuit of Worldly Profit, Ease, or Pleasure, Compared with a Life Wholly Employed in Endeavouring to Glorify God, and Do Good to Mankind: Illustrated in Some Account of the Pious Lady Elizabeth Hastings, and of Armelle Nicolas, a Poor Ignorant Country Maid in France, Commonly Known by the Name of the Good Armelle. : [Five Lines of Quotation].
MLA (9th ed.) CitationJeanne, de la Nativité. The Folly and Vanity of a Life Spent in the Pursuit of Worldly Profit, Ease, or Pleasure, Compared with a Life Wholly Employed in Endeavouring to Glorify God, and Do Good to Mankind: Illustrated in Some Account of the Pious Lady Elizabeth Hastings, and of Armelle Nicolas, a Poor Ignorant Country Maid in France, Commonly Known by the Name of the Good Armelle. : [Five Lines of Quotation].