APA (7th ed.) Citation

Burnam, R. (1645). A remonstrance, or A necessitated vindication of Robert Burnam against two false scandalous libells, malitiously scattered in the name of Elizabeth Burnam his wife, and which she by some perverse and wicked counsell seemeth to maintaine. Or, The plaine mans declaration against conjugall separation, wherein as in a mirror or glasse, you may lively behold the vast difference betweene a good wife and one transcendently bad. Printed by Thomas Paine, in Redcrosse-street..

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Burnam, Robert. A Remonstrance, or A Necessitated Vindication of Robert Burnam Against Two False Scandalous Libells, Malitiously Scattered in the Name of Elizabeth Burnam His Wife, and Which She by Some Perverse and Wicked Counsell Seemeth to Maintaine. Or, The Plaine Mans Declaration Against Conjugall Separation, Wherein as in a Mirror or Glasse, You May Lively Behold the Vast Difference Betweene a Good Wife and One Transcendently Bad. London,: Printed by Thomas Paine, in Redcrosse-street., 1645.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Burnam, Robert. A Remonstrance, or A Necessitated Vindication of Robert Burnam Against Two False Scandalous Libells, Malitiously Scattered in the Name of Elizabeth Burnam His Wife, and Which She by Some Perverse and Wicked Counsell Seemeth to Maintaine. Or, The Plaine Mans Declaration Against Conjugall Separation, Wherein as in a Mirror or Glasse, You May Lively Behold the Vast Difference Betweene a Good Wife and One Transcendently Bad. Printed by Thomas Paine, in Redcrosse-street., 1645.

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