Marsin, M. (1697). A rehearsal of the covenant by Moses made with the children of Israel, at Mount Horeb: Including the strangers which were then with them, and those that afterward should be brought into covenant with them by Christ; from which adopted seed comes the root of gall and wormwoood, which is the blood-thirst drunkard, whom St. Paul terms the root of bitterness. With a certain account how the mountains of Sicily and Naples came to be fired, being prophesied of by Moses. publisher not identified.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationMarsin, M. A Rehearsal of the Covenant by Moses Made with the Children of Israel, at Mount Horeb: Including the Strangers Which Were Then with Them, and Those That Afterward Should Be Brought into Covenant with Them by Christ; from Which Adopted Seed Comes the Root of Gall and Wormwoood, Which Is the Blood-thirst Drunkard, Whom St. Paul Terms the Root of Bitterness. With a Certain Account How the Mountains of Sicily and Naples Came to Be Fired, Being Prophesied of by Moses. [London: publisher not identified, 1697.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationMarsin, M. A Rehearsal of the Covenant by Moses Made with the Children of Israel, at Mount Horeb: Including the Strangers Which Were Then with Them, and Those That Afterward Should Be Brought into Covenant with Them by Christ; from Which Adopted Seed Comes the Root of Gall and Wormwoood, Which Is the Blood-thirst Drunkard, Whom St. Paul Terms the Root of Bitterness. With a Certain Account How the Mountains of Sicily and Naples Came to Be Fired, Being Prophesied of by Moses. publisher not identified, 1697.