(1793). The French convert: Being a true relation of the happy conversion of a noble French lady, from the errors and superstitions of popery, to the reformed religion, by means of a Protestant gardener, her servant. Wherein is shewn, her great and unparallelled sufferings, on the account of her said conversion: as also her wonderful deliverance from two assassins, hired by a popish priest to murder her: and of her miraculous preservation in a wood for two years; and how she was at last providentially found by her husband; who, together with her parents, were brought over to the embracing of the true religion, as were divers others also. Printed by J. Harrisson, for J. Reid, no. 17, Water-Street.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationThe French Convert: Being a True Relation of the Happy Conversion of a Noble French Lady, from the Errors and Superstitions of Popery, to the Reformed Religion, by Means of a Protestant Gardener, Her Servant. Wherein Is Shewn, Her Great and Unparallelled Sufferings, on the Account of Her Said Conversion: As Also Her Wonderful Deliverance from Two Assassins, Hired by a Popish Priest to Murder Her: And of Her Miraculous Preservation in a Wood for Two Years; and How She Was at Last Providentially Found by Her Husband; Who, Together with Her Parents, Were Brought over to the Embracing of the True Religion, as Were Divers Others Also. New-York: Printed by J. Harrisson, for J. Reid, no. 17, Water-Street, 1793.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationThe French Convert: Being a True Relation of the Happy Conversion of a Noble French Lady, from the Errors and Superstitions of Popery, to the Reformed Religion, by Means of a Protestant Gardener, Her Servant. Wherein Is Shewn, Her Great and Unparallelled Sufferings, on the Account of Her Said Conversion: As Also Her Wonderful Deliverance from Two Assassins, Hired by a Popish Priest to Murder Her: And of Her Miraculous Preservation in a Wood for Two Years; and How She Was at Last Providentially Found by Her Husband; Who, Together with Her Parents, Were Brought over to the Embracing of the True Religion, as Were Divers Others Also. Printed by J. Harrisson, for J. Reid, no. 17, Water-Street, 1793.