O'Callaghan, J. (1828). Usury, or, lending at interest: Also, the exaction and payment of certain church-fees, such as pew-rents, burial-fees, and the like, together with forestalling traffick, all proved to be repugnant to the divine and ecclesiastical law, and destructive to civil society, to which is prefixed, a narrative of the controversy between the author and Bishop Coppinger. W. Cobbett.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationO'Callaghan, Jeremiah. Usury, or, Lending at Interest: Also, the Exaction and Payment of Certain Church-fees, Such as Pew-rents, Burial-fees, and the like, Together with Forestalling Traffick, All Proved to Be Repugnant to the Divine and Ecclesiastical Law, and Destructive to Civil Society, to Which Is Prefixed, a Narrative of the Controversy Between the Author and Bishop Coppinger. London: W. Cobbett, 1828.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationO'Callaghan, Jeremiah. Usury, or, Lending at Interest: Also, the Exaction and Payment of Certain Church-fees, Such as Pew-rents, Burial-fees, and the like, Together with Forestalling Traffick, All Proved to Be Repugnant to the Divine and Ecclesiastical Law, and Destructive to Civil Society, to Which Is Prefixed, a Narrative of the Controversy Between the Author and Bishop Coppinger. W. Cobbett, 1828.