Book,  Par.

 1     I,      2|          the magistrates, and the laws. He was wholly unopposed,
 2     I,      2|       while the protection of the laws was unavailing, as they
 3     I,     11|        Asinius; the titles of the laws passed, the names of the
 4     I,     13| necessities of the State in which laws had then no place, drove
 5     I,     77|          little protection in the laws, I urged him to arrest myself,
 6     I,     95|         revived, replied that the laws must be enforced. He too
 7    II,     17|     forget alike divine and human laws. If in your weariness of
 8    II,     45|           and a subversion of the laws which had prescribed proper
 9    II,     66|         votes, in the same way as laws were defeated even when
10    II,     93|       Senate, of an appeal to the laws. It is not the chief duty
11    II,    108|          Roman people under equal laws."~ ~
12   III,     15|        place Germanicus above the laws, by conducting the inquiry
13   III,     23|         from the Senate. What the laws secure on behalf of every
14   III,     37|         country suffered from its laws, as it had hitherto suffered
15   III,     38|         kings, preferred codes of laws. These were at first simple,
16   III,     38|        chief legislator, to whose laws even kings were to be subject. ~ ~
17   III,     39|     enactment of many conflicting laws, till Lucius Sulla, the
18   III,     39|         for individual cases, and laws were most numerous when
19   III,     48|           by the Oppian and other laws; now, loosed from every
20   III,     49|         men blameless? The Oppian laws were formerly adopted to
21   III,     71|    pointed out that the sumptuary laws were disregarded, that prohibited
22   III,     74|           inflame it. Of the many laws devised by our ancestors,
23   III,     95|         emperor should be judge. "Laws, indeed," he said, "punish
24   III,     96|    ambitious schemings of others. Laws are ordained to meet facts,
25   III,     96|          can have recourse to the laws." ~ ~
26    IV,      7|    exercised their authority; the laws too, with the single exception
27    IV,     25|      Senate, as if there were any laws by which Silius was being
28    IV,     40|   informers, complaining that the laws would be ineffective, and
29    IV,     76|    Cocceius Nerva, learned in the laws, one Roman knight, besides
30    XI,      6|      himself all the functions of laws and magistrates, the emperor
31    XI,     27| Subsequently Sulla, by one of his laws, provided that twenty should
32   XII,      6|        earliest youth to obey the laws. ~ ~
33   XII,     38|       allies with respect for our laws. ~ ~
34   XII,     70|         struggles; the Sempronian laws vesting judicial power in
35   XII,     70|         with himself and with the laws. ~ ~
36  XIII,     63|          war, or on the taxes and laws and other matters involving
37   XIV,     24|         formed in defiance of the laws were dissolved. Livineius
38   XIV,     55|       contrary to the customs and laws of our ancestors, and I
39   XIV,     60|       punishments ordained by the laws, which prescribe penalties,
40    XV,      7|         the conquered tribute and laws and Roman administration,
41    XV,     22|          promises held out by the laws, for which they had long
42    XV,     25|          Senators, that admirable laws and right precedents among
43    XV,     25|         candidates, in the Julian laws; the rapacity of magistrates,
44   XVI,      4|          and conformed to all the laws of harp-playing, not sitting
45   XVI,     24|        religious rites; he annuls laws. The daily records of the
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