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						<p>Let it, however, be so decreed if you like. For I will undertake, and, as I hope, I shall
       find one who will not think it suitable to his dignity to refuse what you decide on for the
       sake of the universal safety. He imposes besides a severe punishment on the burgesses of the
       municipal town if any of the prisoners escape; he surrounds them with the most terrible
       guard, and with everything worthy of the wickedness of abandoned men. And he proposes to
       establish a decree that no one shall be able to alleviate the punishment of those whom he is
       condemning by a vote of either the senate or the people. He takes away even hope, which alone
       can comfort men in their miseries; besides this, he votes that their goods should be
       confiscated; he leaves life <pb n="322" /> alone to these infamous men, and if he had taken
       that away; he would have relieved them by one pang of many tortures of mind and body, and of
       all the punishment of their crimes. Therefore, that there might be some dread in life to the
       wicked, men of old have believed that there were some punishments of that sort appointed for
       the wicked in the shades below; because in truth they perceived that if this were taken away
       death itself would not be terrible. </p></div1></body></text></group></text></TEI.2>