[9]
Remark the care of our ancestors, who as yet suspected no such conduct as this, but
yet provided against the things which might happen in affairs of small importance.
They thought that no one who had gone as governor or as lieutenant into a province
would be so insane as to buy silver, for that was given him out of the public fends;
or raiment, for that was afforded him by the laws; they thought he might buy a
slave, a thing which we all use, and which is not provided by the laws. They made a
law, therefore, “that no one should buy a slave except in the room of a
slave who was dead.” If any slave had died at Rome? No, if any one had died in the place where
his master was. For they did not mean you to furnish your house in the province, but
to be of use to the province in its necessities.
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