APA (7th ed.) Citation

Elys, E. (1698). To all persons that have any sense of the reality of vertue: In the pursuit of my design to demonstrate, that the people called Quakers, deserve more favour from the Church of England, than any other sort of dissenters. I shall here recite some passages in the Book of common-prayer, to which they acknowledge, that it is their duty, and that in Christ they have a power, to conform themselves in the whole course of their lives. publisher not identified.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Elys, Edmund. To All Persons That Have Any Sense of the Reality of Vertue: In the Pursuit of My Design to Demonstrate, That the People Called Quakers, Deserve More Favour from the Church of England, than Any Other Sort of Dissenters. I Shall Here Recite Some Passages in the Book of Common-prayer, to Which They Acknowledge, That It Is Their Duty, and That in Christ They Have a Power, to Conform Themselves in the Whole Course of Their Lives. [London: publisher not identified, 1698.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Elys, Edmund. To All Persons That Have Any Sense of the Reality of Vertue: In the Pursuit of My Design to Demonstrate, That the People Called Quakers, Deserve More Favour from the Church of England, than Any Other Sort of Dissenters. I Shall Here Recite Some Passages in the Book of Common-prayer, to Which They Acknowledge, That It Is Their Duty, and That in Christ They Have a Power, to Conform Themselves in the Whole Course of Their Lives. publisher not identified, 1698.

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