Stafford, R. (1689). The truth which God hath shewn unto his servant, Richard Stafford: Wherein it is fully and particularly manifested (to the several orders and degrees of men, and under the principal heads of good and evil) that the greatest happiness of this life consisteth in the fear of God and keeping his commandments, in opposition to the pleasures of sin, or the seeming conveniency of disobedience and within each subject of discourse there is infolded a sutable word of exhortation. [s.n.].
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationStafford, Richard. The Truth Which God Hath Shewn Unto His Servant, Richard Stafford: Wherein It Is Fully and Particularly Manifested (to the Several Orders and Degrees of Men, and Under the Principal Heads of Good and Evil) That the Greatest Happiness of This Life Consisteth in the Fear of God and Keeping His Commandments, in Opposition to the Pleasures of Sin, or the Seeming Conveniency of Disobedience and Within Each Subject of Discourse There Is Infolded a Sutable Word of Exhortation. London: [s.n.], 1689.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationStafford, Richard. The Truth Which God Hath Shewn Unto His Servant, Richard Stafford: Wherein It Is Fully and Particularly Manifested (to the Several Orders and Degrees of Men, and Under the Principal Heads of Good and Evil) That the Greatest Happiness of This Life Consisteth in the Fear of God and Keeping His Commandments, in Opposition to the Pleasures of Sin, or the Seeming Conveniency of Disobedience and Within Each Subject of Discourse There Is Infolded a Sutable Word of Exhortation. [s.n.], 1689.