More, H. (1796). Sunday reading: On carrying religion into the common business of life. A dialogue between James Stock and Will. Simpson, the shoemakers, as they sat at work. To which is addded, the hackney coachman, &c. Sold by William Watson and Son, No. 7, Capel-street, printers to the Cheap Repository for Religious and Moral Tracts, and B. Dugdale, No. 6 Dame-street; and by the booksellers, chapmen, and hawkers, in town and country.
Chicago-Zitierstil (17. Ausg.)More, Hannah. Sunday Reading: On Carrying Religion into the Common Business of Life. A Dialogue Between James Stock and Will. Simpson, the Shoemakers, as They Sat at Work. To Which Is Addded, the Hackney Coachman, &c. Dublin: Sold by William Watson and Son, No. 7, Capel-street, printers to the Cheap Repository for Religious and Moral Tracts, and B. Dugdale, No. 6 Dame-street; and by the booksellers, chapmen, and hawkers, in town and country, 1796.
MLA-Zitierstil (9. Ausg.)More, Hannah. Sunday Reading: On Carrying Religion into the Common Business of Life. A Dialogue Between James Stock and Will. Simpson, the Shoemakers, as They Sat at Work. To Which Is Addded, the Hackney Coachman, &c. Sold by William Watson and Son, No. 7, Capel-street, printers to the Cheap Repository for Religious and Moral Tracts, and B. Dugdale, No. 6 Dame-street; and by the booksellers, chapmen, and hawkers, in town and country, 1796.