Book
1 2 | weak, and whether he be rich or poor; and, on the other
2 2 | virtue, even though a man be rich in all the so–called goods
3 2 | strong, and handsome and rich, and does throughout his
4 3 | difference among them; and rich they could not have been,
5 3 | princesses who had recently grown rich, and in the absence of the
6 3 | led by the sons of very rich and royal persons; for never
7 4 | to any one because he is rich, or because he possesses
8 4 | But if I had an extremely rich wife, and she bade me bury
9 5 | that he may leave them as rich as possible. For the possession
10 5 | attack on the property of the rich—these, who are the natural
11 5 | should be as great and as rich as possible, and should
12 5 | to make him so; but very rich and very good at the same
13 5 | riches. For they mean by “the rich” the few who have the most
14 5 | to the doctrine that the rich man will be happy—he must
15 5 | must be good as well as rich. And good in a high degree,
16 5 | good in a high degree, and rich in a high degree at the
17 5 | nor unjustly, will be a rich man if he be also thrifty.
18 5 | is true, that the very rich are not good, and, if they
19 6 | nor specially to desire a rich one; but if other things
20 6 | provision, not only that the rich man shall not marry into
21 6 | shall not marry into the rich family, nor the powerful
22 6 | too desirous of making a rich marriage we should endeavour
23 8 | in the hope of becoming rich; and will make no objection
24 8 | become either noble, or rich, or strong, or valiant,
25 9 | ought not to seek to be rich, or rather he should seek
26 9 | rather he should seek to be rich justly and temperately,
27 11| which the nephew, having a rich father, will be unwilling
28 12| to see something that is rich and rare in other states,
29 12| the doors of the wise and rich, being one of them himself:
30 12| that the citizens should be rich, not caring whether they
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