Book,  Par.

 1    II,     35|              soon as he found enough witnesses, with some slaves who knew
 2   III,     11|       accusers, but as deponents and witnesses to facts. Trio, abandoning
 3   III,     24|         While the accusers and their witnesses pressed the prosecution
 4    IV,     86|            rest should be present as witnesses, and that then they should
 5    IV,     87|       appearance of secrecy, and, if witnesses were to stand behind the
 6    VI,     73| superintended the examination of the witnesses and the torture of the slaves,
 7    XI,     36|             an appointed day, before witnesses duly summoned, they should
 8  XIII,     54|              his crimes at Rome, the witnesses of which were on the spot.
 9  XIII,     67|             time for summoning their witnesses, while the defendant insisted
10   XIV,     60|             as evidence, the adverse witnesses were believed, and Junius
11    XV,     19|              the king had sent to be witnesses, that no Roman was to enter
12    XV,     47|              emperor; people saw the witnesses of the ceremony, the wedding
13   XVI,     37|          Place was then given to the witnesses, and the appearance among
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