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19.23. 23. How the Laws are founded on the Manners of a People.

At the time when the manners of the Romans were pure, they had no particular law against the embezzlement of the public money. When this crime began to appear, it was thought so infamous, that to be condemned to restore [27] what they had taken was considered as a sufficient disgrace: for a proof of this, see the sentence of L. Scipio. [28]

Footnotes

[27]

"In simplum."

[28]

Livy, lib. xxxviii.