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Greed |
Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
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Greed See also Stinginess. Almayer’s Folly lust for gold leads to decline. [Br. Lit.: Almayer’s Folly] Shakespearean symbol of avarice. [Br. Lit.: The Tempest] fans husband’s hypochondria to get his money. [Fr. Lit.: Le Malade Imaginaire] agrees to sell shadow, symbol of her fertility. [Aust. Opera: R. Strauss, Woman Without a Shadow, Westerman, 432] turns in partner Joe Christmas for reward money. [Am. Lit.: Light in August] the get-rich-quick club. [Am. Lit.: The Common Lot, Hart, 369] inherits, marries, and hoards money. [Br. Lit.: Vanity Fair] wealth as raison d’être. [Fr. Lit.: Eugenie Grandet, Magill I, 258–260]
riches as raison d’être. [Am. Lit.: The Financier, Magill I, 280–282] behind master’s back, takes money he declined. [O.T.: II Kings 5:21–22] insatiable desire for wealth causes his downfall. [Am. Lit.: An American Tragedy] hastily marries courtesan posing as wealthy widow. [Br. Lit.: A Trick to Catch the Old One] Hebrew place name: where greedy were buried. [O.T.: Numbers, 11:33–35] duped into succoring profligate nephew by lure of a fortune. [Br. Lit.: A Trick To Catch the Old One] avaricious fallen angel. [Br. Lit.: Paradise Lost] avaricious knight; seeks philosopher’s stone for Midas touch. [Br. Lit.: The Alchemist] shows material advantages of respectability winning over kinship. [Am. Lit.: The Mansion, Hart, 520] greedy king whose touch turned everything to gold. [Classical Myth.: Bulfinch, 42–44] mercenary chief proverbially kept for himself all the booty. [Fr. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 618] another’s possession gotten, by hook or crook. [O.T.: I Kings, 21] place of ruthless contest among moneymongers. [Br. Lit.: New Grub Street, Magill I, 647–649] marries Isabel Archer for her money. [Am. Lit.: The Portrait of a Lady, Magill I, 766–768] grasping usurer, unscrupulous and ambitious. [Br. Lit.: A New Way to Pay Old Debts, Wheeler, 275] three brothers kill each other for treasure. [Br. Lit.: Canterbury Tales, “Pardoner’s Tale”] medieval symbol of avarice. [Art: Hall, 247] marries old man in anticipation of inheritance. [Am. Lit.: Desire Under the Elms] byword for greedy miser. [Br. Lit.: A Christmas Carol] condemned to impossible task for his avarice. [Gk. Myth.: Wheeler, 1011] |
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