Jones, J. The crie of blood, or, A confutation of those thirteene reasons of the felicers at Westminster for the maintenance of their illegall capias for debt: By which is discovered the great benefit and freedome that will accrew to the people of the common wealth by the reformation of that destructive law.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationJones, John. The Crie of Blood, or, A Confutation of Those Thirteene Reasons of the Felicers at Westminster for the Maintenance of Their Illegall Capias for Debt: By Which Is Discovered the Great Benefit and Freedome That Will Accrew to the People of the Common Wealth by the Reformation of That Destructive Law.
MLA (8th ed.) CitationJones, John. The Crie of Blood, or, A Confutation of Those Thirteene Reasons of the Felicers at Westminster for the Maintenance of Their Illegall Capias for Debt: By Which Is Discovered the Great Benefit and Freedome That Will Accrew to the People of the Common Wealth by the Reformation of That Destructive Law.