Someone I know once said that Mr William Gates is one of this world's poorer people and far less of a financial success than he is usually portrayed to be; his reason for so saying was that he believed that Mr Gates would be at least 100 times richer than he is now if no one ion the world had ever made illicit copies of Microsoft software.
Well, I'm not about to check my heart to see if it is bleeding for Mr Gates, but the person who made this comment almost certainly has a point, as far as it may go. "Financial wealth", as he put it, "means - and has always meant and will always mean - different things to different people, in strict accordance with their expectations or aspirations at any given moment in their lives; for me, a man or woman is not financially "wealthy" unless they are capable of seeing what is going on in America, disapproving of it and then dealing with that disapproval by buying America and changing those things in it that merited the disapproval".
I guess that this would mark out most composers as suffering from excessive poverty indeed. No change there, then...
Best,
Alistair