2 02 Of the Advancement of Learning, L i b . VI. 



VAIN-GLORY. XIX. 



Pro. 



He that feekj his own prdife , 

 xpithalfeeks the profit of others. 



He that is fo rcferv'd, as to re- 

 gard nothing that is forreign 5 it 

 niay he fufpe^ed , that he rpill ac' 

 count publicly affairs^ forreign int- 

 pertinetjcies. 



SHch Dijpojitions ai have a com- 

 mixture of Levity in them, more 

 eajilj undertake a public k^charge. 



Contra. 



Vain-glorious perfons are always/ 

 fa&ious^ lyers, incon^ant , over- 

 doing. 



Thrafo is Gnztho's prey. 



It is ajliame for a Lover to make 

 fuit to the hand-maid 3 but Praife if 

 vertuei hand-maido 



JUSTICE. XX. 



Pro. 



Kingdoms and 'States are only 

 the /Appendices of Jujiice : for if 

 Jujiice othervptfe could be executed^ 

 there would be no need of them. 



It is the efe3 of JuHice , that 

 man is to man a Cod , and not a 

 Wolf 



Though Jujiice cannot extirpate 

 Vice 5 yet it reprejfeth it from do- 

 ing hurt. 



Contra. 



If this be to bejuji, not to do to 

 another what you would not havt 

 done to your felf-, then is mercy 

 Jujiice. 



If we muji give every one his 

 due^ then Jurely pardon to Huma- 

 nity. 



what tell you me of equity when 

 to a wife man all things are un- 

 equal .«■ 



Do but confider what the condi- 

 tion of the guilty was in the Roman 

 State 5 and then fay Jujiice is not 

 for the Republic^.. 



The common Jujiice of States is 

 as a Philofopher in Court -, that is, 

 it makes only for a reverential re- 

 fpe& offuch as bear Rule, 



FORTITUDE. XXI. 



Pro. Contra. 



Nothing hut fear is terrible. That's a goodly vertue to be 



There is nothing folid in plea- willing to dye, fo you may be fun 



fure, nor ajfurd in vertue, where tokjU' 

 fear difquiets. 



He 



