APA (7th ed.) Citation

Hubberthorn, R. (1654). A reply to a book set forth by one of the blind guides of England who is a priest at Barwick Hall in Lancashire, who writes his name R. Sherlock, Batcheler of Divinity, but he is proved to be a diviner and deceiver of the people: Which book is in answer to some queres set forth to him by them whom he calls Quakers ... Printed for Giles Calvert.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Hubberthorn, Richard. A Reply to a Book Set Forth by One of the Blind Guides of England Who Is a Priest at Barwick Hall in Lancashire, Who Writes His Name R. Sherlock, Batcheler of Divinity, but He Is Proved to Be a Diviner and Deceiver of the People: Which Book Is in Answer to Some Queres Set Forth to Him by Them Whom He Calls Quakers ... London: Printed for Giles Calvert, 1654.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Hubberthorn, Richard. A Reply to a Book Set Forth by One of the Blind Guides of England Who Is a Priest at Barwick Hall in Lancashire, Who Writes His Name R. Sherlock, Batcheler of Divinity, but He Is Proved to Be a Diviner and Deceiver of the People: Which Book Is in Answer to Some Queres Set Forth to Him by Them Whom He Calls Quakers ... Printed for Giles Calvert, 1654.

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