Johnson, J. (1659). The Quaker quasht and his quarrel quelled:: In an answer to a railing pamphlet written by Martin Mason of Lincoln. Intituled The boasting Baptist dismounted and the beast disarmed and sorely wounded without any carnal weapon. Whereutno is added eighteen several meditations usually received by the Quakers at their first enterance into that delusion. printed for Francis Smith in Flying-Horse-Court in Fleet Street, near Chancery Lane End.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationJohnson, Jonathan. The Quaker Quasht and His Quarrel Quelled:: In an Answer to a Railing Pamphlet Written by Martin Mason of Lincoln. Intituled The Boasting Baptist Dismounted and the Beast Disarmed and Sorely Wounded Without Any Carnal Weapon. Whereutno Is Added Eighteen Several Meditations Usually Received by the Quakers at Their First Enterance into That Delusion. London: printed for Francis Smith in Flying-Horse-Court in Fleet Street, near Chancery Lane End, 1659.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationJohnson, Jonathan. The Quaker Quasht and His Quarrel Quelled:: In an Answer to a Railing Pamphlet Written by Martin Mason of Lincoln. Intituled The Boasting Baptist Dismounted and the Beast Disarmed and Sorely Wounded Without Any Carnal Weapon. Whereutno Is Added Eighteen Several Meditations Usually Received by the Quakers at Their First Enterance into That Delusion. printed for Francis Smith in Flying-Horse-Court in Fleet Street, near Chancery Lane End, 1659.