APA (7th ed.) Citation

Whitehead, G. (1697). An antidote against the venome of The snake in the grass, or, The book so stiled: And the Christian people called Quakers vindicated from its most gross abuses and calumnies in certain reflections detecting the nameless author's malice, outrage, and persecution against the said people : unto which is annex'd a brief examination of the author's second book stil'd Satan dis-rob'd : also, some notice taken of his discourse for The divine institution of water-baptism. Printed for Tho. Northcott.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Whitehead, George. An Antidote Against the Venome of The Snake in the Grass, or, The Book so Stiled: And the Christian People Called Quakers Vindicated from Its Most Gross Abuses and Calumnies in Certain Reflections Detecting the Nameless Author's Malice, Outrage, and Persecution Against the Said People : Unto Which Is Annex'd a Brief Examination of the Author's Second Book Stil'd Satan Dis-rob'd : Also, Some Notice Taken of His Discourse for The Divine Institution of Water-baptism. London: Printed for Tho. Northcott, 1697.

MLA (8th ed.) Citation

Whitehead, George. An Antidote Against the Venome of The Snake in the Grass, or, The Book so Stiled: And the Christian People Called Quakers Vindicated from Its Most Gross Abuses and Calumnies in Certain Reflections Detecting the Nameless Author's Malice, Outrage, and Persecution Against the Said People : Unto Which Is Annex'd a Brief Examination of the Author's Second Book Stil'd Satan Dis-rob'd : Also, Some Notice Taken of His Discourse for The Divine Institution of Water-baptism. Printed for Tho. Northcott, 1697.

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