Moral gallantry. A discourse, wherein the author endeavours to prove, that point of honour (abstracting from all other tyes) obliges men to be virtuous. And that there is nothing so mean (or unworthy of a gentleman) as vice. By Sir George Mackenzie

All titles
  • Moral gallantry. A discourse, wherein the author endeavours to prove, that point of honour (abstracting from all other tyes) obliges men to be virtuous. And that there is nothing so mean (or unworthy of a gentleman) as vice. By Sir George Mackenzie
  • Moral paradox. ; Consolation against calumnies.
People / Organizations
Imprint
London] : Printed at Edenburgh, and re-printed at London, by J. Streater, 1669.
Publication year
1669
ESTC No.
R19338
Grub Street ID
77046
Description
[24], 124, [4], 89, [1], 22, 25-38, [2] p. ; 12°.
Note
"Licensed Aug. 25, 1668. Roger L'Estrange" (A1v)

'A moral paradox: maintaining, that it is much easier to be virtuous than vitious', has separate dated title page (leaf G3) and pagination; register is continuous

Leaf G3 is a cancel (Ferguson)

With a final blank leaf

'A consolation against calumnies' (caption title) begins new pagination on leaf L2r

Signatures: A-L]1]2] M]6] N]2

This edition ends with "FINIS" on p. 38 (N1v); cf. R7536 (Wing M177) for a 36 page edition

"A moral paradox" identified as Wing M182 (cancelled entry) on UMI microfilm set "Early English books, 1641-1700", reel 641, pos. 4

Copy filmed on UMI microfilm set "Early English books, 1641-1700", reel 845 wanting all after p. 124

Identified as Wing M177 on UMI microfilm set "Early English books, 1641-1700", reel 845.