Book,  Par.

1    II,     65|       accused of treason by an informer for having ridiculed the
2   III,     68| emperor, was fastened on by an informer, and charged with having
3    IV,     50|     any conspicuously restless informer was, so to say, inviolable;
4    VI,      9|        very lowest work of the informer. One could not distinguish
5    XI,     38|      undertake the work of the informer.~ ~
6   XII,     25|      an accusation, through an informer who was to tax her with
7    XV,     63|        and confronted with the informer easily silenced him, unsupported
8    XV,     69|       might make himself alike informer and witness. ~ ~
9   XVI,     19|      bribing a slave to become informer, robbing him of the means
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