Part, Question
1 1, 26 | and "its use." Thus to a miser the end is money, and its
2 2, 1 | use"; ~and the end of the miser is money as "thing," or
3 2, 2 | than in hoarding: for the miser is hateful, whereas the ~
4 2, 3 | to attain: thus ~for the miser, the end is money. Secondly
5 2, 3 | say ~that the end of the miser is the possession of money;
6 2, 13 | is the end; thus for the miser, money or the possession
7 2, 16 | of that thing ~(thus the miser's end is either money or
8 2, 16 | is the last end; ~for the miser would not seek for money,
9 2, 29 | conclude that everyone hates a miser. But some ~men are misers.
10 2, 29 | Para. 1/1~Reply OBJ 3: The miser hates something accidental
11 2, 34 | of that thing; thus the miser's end is either money or
12 2, 46 | Polit. i, ~3), instancing a miser with regard to riches. Hence
13 2, 102| it: it is a figure of the miser, who ~is excessively careful
14 2, 22 | 3), "the prudence of the miser, whereby he devises various ~
15 2, 22 | no true virtue; nor the miser's justice, whereby he ~scorns
16 2, 22 | severe punishment; nor the ~miser's temperance, whereby he
17 2, 22 | expensive pleasures; ~nor the miser's fortitude, whereby as
18 2, 186| his ~poverty, as the rich miser is careful of his perishable
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