Book,  Par.

 1     I,     99| ascertained that he had inherited poverty. He bade others, who attempted
 2     I,     99|        else preferred silence and poverty to confession and relief.~ ~
 3    II,     46|         noble rank in conspicuous poverty. He was the grandson of
 4    II,     48|     Hortensius sank into shameful poverty.~ ~
 5    II,     63|           relieved the honourable poverty of the virtuous, he expelled
 6   III,     47|            and that his inherited poverty, with the high rank in which
 7   III,     57|          admitted, or any to whom poverty or the fear of guilt was
 8    IV,     61|        the Gaetuli, to have borne poverty with a good grace, then
 9   XII,     22|            the longer he lived in poverty? ~ ~
10   XII,     62|        seats, added effrontery to poverty. ~ ~
11   XII,     63|     limited himself to his former poverty. A decree of the Senate
12  XIII,     41|    Messala might support virtuous poverty. Aurelius Cotta, too, and
13   XIV,     52|            except that he thought poverty the greatest of all evils.
14   XIV,     69|        shall not sink myself into poverty, but having surrendered
15   XIV,     82|          he endured exile without poverty, and died a natural death. ~ ~
16   XVI,      3|          one of the causes of the poverty of the State. Bassus indeed
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