APA Citation

Knaggs, T. (1721). Religion the properest means to peace of conscience: Honour, Profit, Pleasure, and Health. A sermon preach'd at Oxenden chappel in the morning, and at St. Gile's in the Fields in the afternoon. On Sunday, May 7. 1721. By Tho. Knaggs, M. A. And Lecturer of that Parish. London: printed by I. Dawks, and are to be sold at Mr. Griffith's at the London Gazette at Charing-Cross; and A. Dodd, at the Peacock without Temple-Bar.

Chicago Style Citation

Knaggs, Thomas. Religion the Properest Means to Peace of Conscience: Honour, Profit, Pleasure, and Health. A Sermon Preach'd At Oxenden Chappel in the Morning, and At St. Gile's in the Fields in the Afternoon. On Sunday, May 7. 1721. By Tho. Knaggs, M. A. And Lecturer of That Parish. London: printed by I. Dawks, and are to be sold at Mr. Griffith's at the London Gazette at Charing-Cross; and A. Dodd, at the Peacock without Temple-Bar, 1721.

MLA Citation

Knaggs, Thomas. Religion the Properest Means to Peace of Conscience: Honour, Profit, Pleasure, and Health. A Sermon Preach'd At Oxenden Chappel in the Morning, and At St. Gile's in the Fields in the Afternoon. On Sunday, May 7. 1721. By Tho. Knaggs, M. A. And Lecturer of That Parish. London: printed by I. Dawks, and are to be sold at Mr. Griffith's at the London Gazette at Charing-Cross; and A. Dodd, at the Peacock without Temple-Bar, 1721.

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