Book, Chapter

 1    1,   7|  invitations to the tables of the rich, have in mind nothing except
 2    1,  15|            The image of the miser rich, when his avaricious soul~
 3    2,  41|        for him, he don't know how rich he is, but this harlot keeps
 4    2,  52|       like me."~"A poor man and a rich man were enemies," Agamemmon
 5    2,  59|     plumage like Babylon tapestry rich.~Numidian guinea-fowls,
 6    2,  62|           it'? I hope I never get rich and die decently so that
 7    2,  75| CONSCIENTIOUS BRAVE LOYAL~HE GREW RICH FROM LITTLE AND LEFT~THIRTY
 8    3,  84|        part,~The father, son, the rich man, all are here,~But soon
 9    3,  87|         art never yet made anyone rich."~The trader trusts his
10    3,  92|        gift if only he may bury a rich relative; another, if he
11    5, 141|      forgive your sacrilege!"~The rich man can sail in a favoring
12    5, 145|       carry on intrigues with the rich and dissipated. The parasite
13    5, 148|           in his wildest prayers; rich, well born, chaste, you,
14    5, 154|           the under-garments, the rich tunics, embroidered with
15    5, 154|          his return. Whenever the rich prepare a solemn and popular
16    5, 154|      prospect of gain will urge a rich and gouty senator as far
17    5, 155|      there are that grovel before rich men, old men or young, childless
18    5, 160|         was danced everywhere, by rich and poor, by senators' wives
19    6     |          first men of Greece. The rich offerings that decorated
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