Besse, J. A reply to a late defence of the pamphlet intituled, Baptism with water and infant-baptism asserted: Wherein the mistakes of the author of that defence are farther rectified, and his reasonings farther confuted. With an appendix, containing some remarks on the preface to a late reply to the Protestant flail; and shewing, that the reformation from popery, in England, was in a great measure owing to the zeal and constancy of illiterate men and women; and that the people called Quakers have been, and are, the most thorough-Protestant reformers in the world.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationBesse, Joseph. A Reply to a Late Defence of the Pamphlet Intituled, Baptism with Water and Infant-baptism Asserted: Wherein the Mistakes of the Author of That Defence Are Farther Rectified, and His Reasonings Farther Confuted. With an Appendix, Containing Some Remarks on the Preface to a Late Reply to the Protestant Flail; and Shewing, That the Reformation from Popery, in England, Was in a Great Measure Owing to the Zeal and Constancy of Illiterate Men and Women; and That the People Called Quakers Have Been, and Are, the Most Thorough-Protestant Reformers in the World.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationBesse, Joseph. A Reply to a Late Defence of the Pamphlet Intituled, Baptism with Water and Infant-baptism Asserted: Wherein the Mistakes of the Author of That Defence Are Farther Rectified, and His Reasonings Farther Confuted. With an Appendix, Containing Some Remarks on the Preface to a Late Reply to the Protestant Flail; and Shewing, That the Reformation from Popery, in England, Was in a Great Measure Owing to the Zeal and Constancy of Illiterate Men and Women; and That the People Called Quakers Have Been, and Are, the Most Thorough-Protestant Reformers in the World.