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Raligh gains at expense of poor

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  • Quite the same enthusiasm. His highly lucrative monopoly on woolen broadcloth was widely resented as a tax on the poor, while his foppish silks and velvets only served to remind the common folk that much of his wealth had been earned at their expense. Few bothered to disguise their contempt for Ralegh, prompting one courtier to write that ‘no man is more hated than him; none more cursed daily by the poor, for whom infinite numbers are brought to extreme poverty by the gift of cloth to him.’

  • — Raligh gains at expense of poor
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Quotes

On sculptors in ancient Rome: 'No more than a workman, doing hard physical labor,...obscure, earning a small wage, a man of low esteem, classed as worthless by public opinion, neither courted by friends, feared by enemies, nor envied by fellow citizens.' On the other hand, the top astrologers in Rome had both celebrity and political power.

—Lucian
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