Blakeway, R. (1716). An exhortation to obedience and faithful adherence to King George: In two sermons preach'd at Little Ilford in Essex, in November and December, 1715 : Wherein is prov'd, that His Majesty is our rightful king according to the will of God, and laws of man : That the Pretender neither is, nor can be our King, agreeably to either : And that, if he should ever come to the Imperial Crown of these realms (which God forbid) he must be a wicked and tyrannical king. Printed for Bernard Lintott, at the Cross-Keys between the Temple-gates in Fleetstreet.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationBlakeway, Robert. An Exhortation to Obedience and Faithful Adherence to King George: In Two Sermons Preach'd at Little Ilford in Essex, in November and December, 1715 : Wherein Is Prov'd, That His Majesty Is Our Rightful King According to the Will of God, and Laws of Man : That the Pretender Neither Is, nor Can Be Our King, Agreeably to Either : And That, If He Should Ever Come to the Imperial Crown of These Realms (which God Forbid) He Must Be a Wicked and Tyrannical King. London: Printed for Bernard Lintott, at the Cross-Keys between the Temple-gates in Fleetstreet, 1716.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationBlakeway, Robert. An Exhortation to Obedience and Faithful Adherence to King George: In Two Sermons Preach'd at Little Ilford in Essex, in November and December, 1715 : Wherein Is Prov'd, That His Majesty Is Our Rightful King According to the Will of God, and Laws of Man : That the Pretender Neither Is, nor Can Be Our King, Agreeably to Either : And That, If He Should Ever Come to the Imperial Crown of These Realms (which God Forbid) He Must Be a Wicked and Tyrannical King. Printed for Bernard Lintott, at the Cross-Keys between the Temple-gates in Fleetstreet, 1716.