APA (7th ed.) Citation

Meanwell, O. (1742). An epistle from Obadiah Meanwell, one of the people called Quakers, dwelling at Wycomb in Buckinghamshire, to Robert Meek, whose habitation is in London: In which epistle the conduct of a great man is friendly examined, and seemingly justified, from the revilings ... which the envious-minded have raised against him. T. Cooper.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Meanwell, Obadiah. An Epistle from Obadiah Meanwell, One of the People Called Quakers, Dwelling at Wycomb in Buckinghamshire, to Robert Meek, Whose Habitation Is in London: In Which Epistle the Conduct of a Great Man Is Friendly Examined, and Seemingly Justified, from the Revilings ... Which the Envious-minded Have Raised Against Him. London: T. Cooper, 1742.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Meanwell, Obadiah. An Epistle from Obadiah Meanwell, One of the People Called Quakers, Dwelling at Wycomb in Buckinghamshire, to Robert Meek, Whose Habitation Is in London: In Which Epistle the Conduct of a Great Man Is Friendly Examined, and Seemingly Justified, from the Revilings ... Which the Envious-minded Have Raised Against Him. T. Cooper, 1742.

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