Faith,
Having done field comparisons, I agree with Adrian. The Delos eyepieces, if you can afford them, would be "lifetime" eyepieces. You now will have 17.3, 10, and 6mm to pick among. Alvin Huey, a consummate observer, says they even slightly outperform the Ethos eyepieces when it comes to seeing faint targets.
Whereas there are other characteristics of eyepieces that are as important as the pure ability to see faint targets, that certainly speaks highly of them.
Add to that the fact you will almost never have to clean them because you will never get close enough to the eye lens to accidentally brush your eyelashes on the lens, and they would appear to be the nearly ideal eyepiece type. [For me, a little narrow of field, but compared to your mentioned eyepieces, quite wide of field].
You will also find that, as I did, as the eyepiece field gets wider, you don't have to do as much changing of eyepieces to frame the objects. An eyepiece that has a high enough power to examine the object also has a wide enough field to find it. I've often said to friends I observe with that I could be reasonably happy with just one eyepiece--the 13 Ethos--for that reason.
As for the Paracorr, since star images at the edges will be essentially the same as in the center when using one, you will be able to identify all sorts of faint targets at or near the edge of the field that you now have to bring to the center to identify. Close double stars look like doubles at the edge instead of small planetary nebulae. And very faint stars will be more visible in the outer 50% of the field because they will not be smeared to invisibility. Countering intuition, adding the extra lenses of the Paracorr seemed to make fainter targets easier to see instead of harder. Plus, the Paracorr essentially parfocalizes your eyepieces, which is a convenience. Recommended. But remember, it's the price of an expensive eyepiece, so I can understand the budget issues.