APA (7th ed.) Citation

Whitfield, T. (1649). A discourse of liberty of conscience: Wherin the arguments on both sides are so equally laid together in the ballance, that the indifferent reader may without difficulty judge whither side weighes the heavier. for John Wright at the Kings Head in the old Bayley.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Whitfield, Thomas. A Discourse of Liberty of Conscience: Wherin the Arguments on Both Sides Are so Equally Laid Together in the Ballance, That the Indifferent Reader May Without Difficulty Judge Whither Side Weighes the Heavier. Imprinted at London: for John Wright at the Kings Head in the old Bayley, 1649.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Whitfield, Thomas. A Discourse of Liberty of Conscience: Wherin the Arguments on Both Sides Are so Equally Laid Together in the Ballance, That the Indifferent Reader May Without Difficulty Judge Whither Side Weighes the Heavier. for John Wright at the Kings Head in the old Bayley, 1649.

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