Book,  Par.

 1    II,     37|        might be tried on their evidence. As a consequence, the defendant
 2    II,     43|     judges, whenever they gave evidence.~ ~
 3   III,     15| accused from producing all the evidence which can relieve his innocence
 4   III,     68|    were frightened into giving evidence. She alone swore that she
 5     V,      4|  indeed never before given any evidence of courage) or a misdirected
 6    XI,     45|       and was now offering his evidence, Vettius Valens, who confessed
 7   XII,     31|   credit of it, without actual evidence. ~ ~
 8  XIII,     22|      He went through the whole evidence in order, and so frightened
 9   XIV,     60|        he had heard nothing as evidence, the adverse witnesses were
10    XV,     18|       had required this, as an evidence of their victory; for the
11    XV,     96|        to the people, with the evidence which had been entered on
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