APA (7th ed.) Citation

Yate, W. H. (1804). A serious & impartial address, to all the independent electors of the United Kingdoms, upon the recent Middlesex election: In which the proceedings & transactions of that extraordinary event are candidly and constitutionally discussed and investigated, the fatal tendency and destructive consequences of such a precedent considered, and the whole viewed as a grand national cause, in which that most invaluable privilege, the elective franchise, and the representative system itself are most intimately involved. [s.n.].

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Yate, Walter Honywood. A Serious & Impartial Address, to All the Independent Electors of the United Kingdoms, upon the Recent Middlesex Election: In Which the Proceedings & Transactions of That Extraordinary Event Are Candidly and Constitutionally Discussed and Investigated, the Fatal Tendency and Destructive Consequences of Such a Precedent Considered, and the Whole Viewed as a Grand National Cause, in Which That Most Invaluable Privilege, the Elective Franchise, and the Representative System Itself Are Most Intimately Involved. S.l: [s.n.], 1804.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Yate, Walter Honywood. A Serious & Impartial Address, to All the Independent Electors of the United Kingdoms, upon the Recent Middlesex Election: In Which the Proceedings & Transactions of That Extraordinary Event Are Candidly and Constitutionally Discussed and Investigated, the Fatal Tendency and Destructive Consequences of Such a Precedent Considered, and the Whole Viewed as a Grand National Cause, in Which That Most Invaluable Privilege, the Elective Franchise, and the Representative System Itself Are Most Intimately Involved. [s.n.], 1804.

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