Caput

 1     6|      showers of missiles, each man having several and hurling
 2     6|    basest of crimes; nor may a man thus disgraced be present
 3     7|     infants. They are to every man the most sacred witnesses
 4    10|       pit him against a picked man of their own tribe, each
 5    12|     coward, the unwarlike, the man stained with abominable
 6    13|       the chiefs, or the young man's father, or some kinsman,
 7    13| dependent on the choice of the man to whom they are attached.
 8    13|      his followers, for such a man is courted by embassies,
 9    19|      for the family. But every man's own children are his heirs
10    26|     pile. The arms of the dead man and in some cases his horse
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