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VERTVES COM∣mon-wealth: or the high-way to honour.
THe fame eternized T••lly, in his booke of duties setteth downe, that the tea∣ching of any doctrine, which is to be taken in hand in due forme, the exor∣dium must begin with a definitiō, that the life of the subiect whereof the dis∣course doth run, may the better be vn∣derstood. Vertue, is an elected habit, or a setled qualitie, cōsisting in a meane, & that meane standeth in the midst* 1.1 of two extreams, the more, & the lesse, and this that some laudable action, which by no other name can be termed but by the onely title of Vertue. Vice is opposite to Ver∣tue, a habit of the minde annexed to nature, not striuing with reason, an inconstant desire in the whole life: re∣belling against honestie: which two affections, growe* 1.2 vp to a habit by degrees, through vse and exercise, cho∣sen by the rationall partes, and when by custome the will is setled in the course of either, the whole disposi∣on is carried to good or bad.
* 1.3 The Stoikes, call Vice and Vertue, Animalia, li∣uing creatures, because by them a man is discerned, for in respect of Vertue, a man is said to be a man, which is the Etymologie of the word, and in respect of Vice, to be a