Mucklow, W. (1673). The spirit of the hat, or, The government of the Quakers among themselves: As it hath been exercised of late years by George Fox and other leading-men in their Monday or second-dayes meeting at Devonshire-House : brought to light in a bemoaning letter of a certain ingenious Quaker to another his friend, wherein their tyranical and persecuting practises are detected and redargued [sic] : also a preface to the reader giving an account how the said letter came to the hand of the publisher. Printed for F. Smith ....
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationMucklow, William. The Spirit of the Hat, or, The Government of the Quakers Among Themselves: As It Hath Been Exercised of Late Years by George Fox and Other Leading-men in Their Monday or Second-dayes Meeting at Devonshire-House : Brought to Light in a Bemoaning Letter of a Certain Ingenious Quaker to Another His Friend, Wherein Their Tyranical and Persecuting Practises Are Detected and Redargued [sic] : Also a Preface to the Reader Giving an Account How the Said Letter Came to the Hand of the Publisher. London: Printed for F. Smith ..., 1673.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationMucklow, William. The Spirit of the Hat, or, The Government of the Quakers Among Themselves: As It Hath Been Exercised of Late Years by George Fox and Other Leading-men in Their Monday or Second-dayes Meeting at Devonshire-House : Brought to Light in a Bemoaning Letter of a Certain Ingenious Quaker to Another His Friend, Wherein Their Tyranical and Persecuting Practises Are Detected and Redargued [sic] : Also a Preface to the Reader Giving an Account How the Said Letter Came to the Hand of the Publisher. Printed for F. Smith ..., 1673.