Book
1 3 | made us more and more the servants of our rulers and of the
2 4 | who are the subjects and servants of a part of their own state,
3 4 | And when I call the rulers servants or ministers of the law,
4 4 | doctors there are doctors’ servants, who are also styled doctors.~
5 6 | ought always to observe; for servants and masters never can be
6 6 | that there ought to be servants of the temples, and priests
7 6 | shall be appointed to be servants of the Gods who have no
8 6 | of the Gods who have no servants. Some of our officers shall
9 6 | that they will be their own servants, and, like servants, will
10 6 | own servants, and, like servants, will not have other slaves
11 6 | not have other slaves and servants for their own use, neither
12 6 | independently by themselves, servants of each other and of themselves.
13 6 | children’s children to be the servants of God in his place for
14 6 | them utterly distrust their servants, and, as if they were wild
15 7 | of being seen by all his servants, always the first to awake
16 8 | and captains of ships, and servants, and converts the valiant
17 8 | as is required for his servants’ drinking, and if his neighbours,
18 8 | that in superintending many servants who are working for him,
19 8 | freemen, another for their servants, and a third for craftsmen
20 8 | and artisans, and their servants. Let any stranger who likes
21 9 | the infection, but their servants, and strangers, and strangers’
22 9 | strangers, and strangers’ servants may be guilty of many impieties.
23 9 | if he be convicted, the servants of the judges and the magistrates
24 11| a man himself, or to his servants, or any injury, whether
25 12| and the appointment of servants to the different magistrates,
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