Book,  Par.

 1   III,     11| misrepresentation by a single judge, where a number would be
 2   III,     52|   convicted of fraud before a judge, assailed him with insults
 3   III,     95|    this the emperor should be judge. "Laws, indeed," he said, "
 4    IV,     77|      He pretended to act as a judge towards the children of
 5   XII,     58|    wide, lest the world might judge of other governors by Pelignus,
 6  XIII,      5|      would not," he said, "be judge in all cases, or, by confining
 7   XIV,     25|    bitter feeling towards the judge, but the Senate replied
 8   XIV,     27|    the honourable office of a judge, because they had listened
 9   XIV,     28|       not be a burden for any judge to bestow his attention
10    XV,     44|   awaited the clemency of the judge.~ ~
11    XV,     85|      both an accomplice and a judge. Accordingly Scaevinus,
12    XV,     90|     assume the semblance of a judge, had recourse to the sheer
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