Mackenzie, G. (1669). Moral gallantry: A discourse wherein the author endeavours to prove that point of honour (abstracting from all other types) obliges men to be virtuous and that there is nothing so mean (or unworthy of a gentleman) as vice. Printed at Edenburgh and re-printed at London by J. Streater.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationMackenzie, George. Moral Gallantry: A Discourse Wherein the Author Endeavours to Prove That Point of Honour (abstracting from All Other Types) Obliges Men to Be Virtuous and That There Is Nothing so Mean (or Unworthy of a Gentleman) as Vice. [London]: Printed at Edenburgh and re-printed at London by J. Streater, 1669.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationMackenzie, George. Moral Gallantry: A Discourse Wherein the Author Endeavours to Prove That Point of Honour (abstracting from All Other Types) Obliges Men to Be Virtuous and That There Is Nothing so Mean (or Unworthy of a Gentleman) as Vice. Printed at Edenburgh and re-printed at London by J. Streater, 1669.