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					<reg>in</reg> the same year Luceria, betraying its Roman garrison to the enemy, passed into the possession of the Samnites; but the traitors did not long go unpunished for their deed.
					<milestone unit="section" n="2" /> <reg>not</reg> far away there was a Roman army, which captured the city —situated as it was in a plain —at the first attack.
					<milestone unit="section" n="3" /> <name>The</name> Lucerini and Samnites were shown no quarter, and resentment ran so high that even in Rome, when the senate was debating the dispatch of colonists to Luceria, there were many who voted to destroy the town.
					<milestone unit="section" n="4" /> <reg>besides</reg> men's hate, which was very bitter against those whom they had twice subdued, there was also the remoteness of the place, which made them shrink from condemning fellow —citizens to an exile so far from home and surrounded by such hostile tribes.
					<milestone unit="section" n="5" /> <reg>however</reg>, the proposal to send colonists prevailed, and twenty —five hundred were sent.</p> 
				<p><reg>in</reg> that year also of general disloyalty to the Romans, there were secret conspiracies of the nobles, even at Capua.<note place="unspecified" anchored="yes">With this sentence Livy resumes the narrative begun in Chap.</note>
					<milestone unit="section" n="6" /> <reg>on</reg> their being reported to the senate, the danger was by no means minimized, but tribunals of enquiry were voted and it was determined to appoint a dictator to conduct the <pb id="p.263" />investigations.
					<milestone unit="section" n="7" /> <name>Gaius</name> Maenius was nominated, and<note type="margin" place="unspecified" anchored="yes">B.C. 314</note> named Marcus Folius master of the horse. <name>Great</name> was the terror inspired by that magistracy; and so, whether from fear or a guilty conscience, the Calavii, Ovius and Novius, who had headed the conspiracy, before informations could be lodged against them with the dictator, avoided trial by a death which was undoubtedly self —inflicted.</p> 
				<p><milestone unit="section" n="8" /><reg>after</reg> that, the field of enquiry at Capua having been exhausted, the proceedings were transferred to Rome, on the theory that the senate had ordered an investigation, not of specified individuals in Capua, but, in general, of all who had anywhere combined or conspired against the State; and that cabals for obtaining magistracies had been made against the common weal.
					<milestone unit="section" n="9" /> <name>The</name> enquiry began to take a wider range, in respect both of charges and of persons, and the dictator was nothing loath that there should be no limit to the jurisdiction of his court.
					<milestone unit="section" n="10" /> <reg>certain</reg> nobles were accordingly impeached, and on appealing to the tribunes found none to help them by stopping the informations.
					<milestone unit="section" n="11" /> <name>The</name> nobles then declared —not those alone at whom the charge was levelled, but all of them conjointly —that this accusation did not lie against the nobility, to whom, unless fraudulently obstructed, the road to office lay wide open, but rather against upstart politicians;
					<milestone unit="section" n="12" /> that in fact the dictator and the master of the horse themselves were fitter to be tried on such a charge than to act as judges, and they would find this to be so the moment they resigned their places.</p> 
				<p><milestone unit="section" n="13" /><reg>then</reg> indeed Maenius, more mindful now of his reputation than of his authority, came forward and addressed the assembly.
					<milestone unit="section" n="14" /> <quote><reg>you</reg> are all of you,</quote> he <pb id="p.265" />said, <quote><name>Quirites</name>, aware of my past life, and this very<note type="margin" place="unspecified" anchored="yes">B.C. 314</note> office which has been conferred upon me is witness to my innocence; for it was necessary to select as dictator for the administration of judicial investigations, not the most distinguished soldier —as has often been done at other times, when some crisis in the state required it —but the man who had lived a life most aloof from these cabals.
						<milestone unit="section" n="15" /> <reg>but</reg> since certain noblemen —for what cause it is better that you should form your own opinion than that I as magistrate should affirm anything not fully ascertained —have in the first place striven with might and main to defeat these very investigations;
						<milestone unit="section" n="16" /> and then, finding themselves not strong enough to escape pleading their cause in court, have sought refuge, patricians though they are, in the safeguards of their adversaries —the appeal, I mean, and the help of the tribunes; —
						<milestone unit="section" n="17" /> and since at last, repulsed in that quarter, they have fallen upon us —so much safer does any course appear to them than to try to vindicate their innocence and have not blushed, though private citizens, to demand the impeachment of a dictator;
						<milestone unit="section" n="18" /> —in order that all gods and men may know that they are attempting even impossibilities to avoid accounting for their lives, whereas I am ready to face their charge and to offer myself to my enemies to be tried, I hereby resign the dictator's authority.
						<milestone unit="section" n="19" /> <reg>you</reg>, consuls, I beseech, if the task shall be devolved upon you by the senate, that you begin your investigations with me and with Marcus Folius here, that it may be seen that we are safe from these accusations by reason of our innocence, not by reason of the awe inspired by our office.</quote>
					<milestone unit="section" n="20" /> <reg>he</reg> then resigned as dictator, and so at once did Folius as master of the horse. <reg>they</reg> were <pb id="p.267" />the first to go to trial before the consuls —for to<note type="margin" place="unspecified" anchored="yes">B.C. 314</note> these the senate had given the matter in charge — and, against the testimony of the nobles, were gloriously acquitted.
					<milestone unit="section" n="21" /> <name>Publilius</name> Philo, too, after all his famous achievements at home and in war, and after having repeatedly held the highest offices, had incurred the hate of the nobility, and was brought to trial and acquitted.<note place="unspecified" anchored="yes">In <date value="-339" authname="-339">339 B.C.</date> <name>Philo</name> had proposed three democratic laws, which won him the enmity of the patricians. <reg>see</reg> viii. xii. 14-16.</note>
					<milestone unit="section" n="22" /> <reg>but</reg> the inquisition, as often happens, had the vigour to deal with illustrious defendants no longer than while its novelty lasted; after that it began to descend to the baser sort, until it was finally put down by the cabals and factions which it had been instituted to oppose.</p> 
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