Book,  Par.

1    II,     35|    indicating the crime and the criminal through Flaccus Vescularius,
2    II,     65|       in any case be treated as criminal. He then acquitted Appuleia
3    IV,     78|   silence and speech were alike criminal. Every night had its anxieties,
4    VI,     42|   alarmed his wife, who, though criminal, was still free from danger." ~ ~
5   XII,      5|  somewhat incautious though not criminal love between the brother
6  XIII,     53|         who would rather seem a criminal than a suppliant. With the
7   XIV,     10|         in irons, as a detected criminal, so that he might invent
8   XVI,     21| freedman of Thermus had brought criminal charges against Tigellinus,
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