No one can doubt that a wise man has more room to develop his abilities when he's rich than when he's poor. If he's poor, the only virtue he can show is not letting poverty corrupt him or break his spirit. But if he has money, he has plenty of chances to practice self-control, generosity, hard work, good organization, and greatness of character.
Who can doubt, however, that the wise man, if he is rich, has a wider field for the development of his powers than if he is poor, seeing that in the latter case the only virtue which he can display is that of neither being perverted nor crushed by his poverty, whereas if he has riches, he will have a wide field for the exhibition of temperance, generosity, laboriousness, methodical arrangement, and grandeur.