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olives to be let at a dearer rate; except when [the joint bidder] immediately names [the other bidder] as his partner.   If this rule shall appear to have been infringed, all the partners [of the company with which the contract has been concluded] shall, if desired by the landlord or the overseer appointed by him, take an oath [that they have not conspired in this way to prevent competition].   If they do not take the oath, the stipulated price is not to be paid." It is tacitly assumed that the contract is taken by a company, not by an individual capitalist.
   27. III. XIII. Religious Economy
   28. Livy (xxi. 63; comp. Cic. Verr. v. 18, 45) mentions only the enactment as to the sea-going vessels; but Asconius (in Or. in toga cand. p. 94, Orell.) and Dio. (lv. 10, 5) state that the senator was also forbidden by law to undertake state-contracts (-redemptiones-); and, as according to Livy "all speculation was considered unseemly for a senator," the Claudian law probably reached further than he states.
   29. Cato, like every other Roman, invested a part of his means in the breeding of cattle, and in commercial and other undertakings.   But it was not his habit directly to violate the laws; he neither speculated in state-leases--which as a senator he was not allowed to do--nor practised usury.   It is an injustice to charge him with a practice in the latter respect at variance with his theory; the -fenus nauticum-, in which he certainly engaged, was not a branch of usury prohibited by the law; it really formed an essential part of the business of chartering and freighting vessels.

   CHAPTER XIII Faith and Manners

   Roman Austerity and Roman Pride
   Life in the case of the Roman was spent under conditions of austere restraint, and, the nobler he was, the less he was a free man.

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