Book, Chapter
1 1, VII | make an] attempt they are punished immediately and without
2 1, VIII | cannot complain if they are punished, they having places open
3 1, VIII | calumniators ought to be punished. For they ought to be made
4 1, VIII | punish them as Manlius was punished.~
5 1, XIV | RECKLESSLY DISPARAGED IT THEY PUNISHED HIM~The Auguries not only (
6 1, XXXI | WERE NEVER EXTRAORDINARILY PUNISHED FOR ERRORS COMMITTED; NOR
7 1, XXXI | COMMITTED; NOR WERE THEY YET PUNISHED WHEN, BY THEIR IGNORANCE
8 1, XXXI | another Republic would have punished them with a capital penalty,
9 1, XXXI | capital penalty, it [Rome] punished them with a monetary fine.
10 2, XXVIII| honored who ought to have been punished, took it all to be to their
11 3, I | their ancient Religion, punished the Fabii who had fought
12 3, I | they cannot any longer be punished without danger.~In connection
13 3, I | it, having in that time punished those who (according to
14 3, XXIX | non-observance, and they never punished the non-observers except
15 3, XXXIII| auspices, they would have punished him as they punished Claudius
16 3, XXXIII| have punished him as they punished Claudius Pulcher. And although
17 3, XLIX | certain, everyone cannot be punished because they are too many:
18 3, XLIX | wrong to those who would be punished, and the unpunished would
19 3, XLIX | it, those who are to be punished will complain of their lot,
20 3, XLIX | their lot, those who are not punished fear that another time the
21 3, XLIX | Bacchanals, therefore, were punished according as their crimes
|