XII
[12arg] Instances of disgrace and punishment inflicted by the censors, found in ancient records and worthy of notice.IF anyone had allowed his land to run to waste and was not giving it sufficient attention, if he had neither ploughed nor weeded it, or if anyone had neglected his orchard or vineyard, such conduct did not go unpunished, but it was taken up by the censors, who reduced such a man to the lowest class of citizens. 1 So too, any Roman knight, if his horse seemed to be skinny or not well groomed, was charged with inpolitiae, a word which means the same thing as negligence. 2 There are authorities for both these punishments, and Marcus Cato has cited frequent instances. 3