Book,  Par.

 1     I,      2|   functions of the Senate, the magistrates, and the laws. He was wholly
 2     I,      3|       tranquil, and there were magistrates with the same titles; there
 3     I,    102|  trying to stop insults to the magistrates and the strife of the mob.
 4    II,     45| proposed that the elections of magistrates should be held every five
 5    II,     45|      fact a multiplying of the magistrates five-fold, and a subversion
 6   III,      3|     with instructions that the magistrates of Calabria, Apulia, and
 7   III,      5|       soldiers under arms, the magistrates without their symbols of
 8   III,     49| rapacity. Well; even among our magistrates, are not many subject to
 9    IV,      7|       their prestige; inferior magistrates exercised their authority;
10    IV,     25|        usual," he argued, "for magistrates to bring a private citizen
11    IV,     56|        your station; but those magistrates and nobles who intrude on
12    IV,     88|       is no reason why the new magistrates should not open the dungeons
13     V,      3|   senators, and especially the magistrates, were perplexed, for Tiberius,
14    VI,     16|     and subsequently the chief magistrates went from Rome, an official
15    VI,     18|    provoked him to censure the magistrates and the Senate for not having
16    XI,      6|      the functions of laws and magistrates, the emperor had left exposed
17    XI,     22|      time, gave them a senate, magistrates, and a constitution. That
18    XI,     30|         was once new. Plebeian magistrates came after patrician; Latin
19    XI,     30|    came after patrician; Latin magistrates after plebeian; magistrates
20    XI,     30|    magistrates after plebeian; magistrates of other Italian peoples
21   XII,     70|      binding as those of Roman magistrates, and after a time most of
22   XII,     74|    portent that every order of magistrates had had its number reduced,
23  XIII,     12|     Lucius Antistius, when the magistrates were swearing obedience
24  XIII,     31|      the establishments of the magistrates and priests were for the
25  XIII,     62|         of the rapacity of the magistrates and of all the chief citizens.
26   XIV,     28|    vast expense. Nor would the magistrates, as hitherto, exhaust their
27    XV,     25|   Julian laws; the rapacity of magistrates, in the Calpurnian enactments.
28    XV,     26|  partiality. Consequently, our magistrates' early career is generally
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