Page:Frontinus - The stratagems, and, the aqueducts of Rome (Bennet et al 1925).djvu/495

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Aqueducts of Rome, II. 105–106

deputy must call in the levellers and provide that the calix[1] is stamped as conforming to the deeded quantity, and must study the size of the ajutages we have enumerated above,[2] as well as have knowledge of their location,[3] lest it rest with the caprice of the levellers to approve a calix of sometimes greater, or sometimes smaller, interior area,[4] according as they interest themselves in the parties. Neither must the deputy permit the free option of connecting directly to the ajutages any sort of lead pipe, but there must rather be attached for a length of fifty feet one of the same interior area as that which the ajutage has been certified to have, as has been ordained by a vote of the Senate which follows:

"The consuls, Quintus Aelius Tubero and Paulus Fabius Maximus, having made a report that some private parties take water directly from the public conduits, and having inquired of the Senate what it would please to order upon the subject, it has been RESOLVED that it is the sense of this body: That it shall not be permitted to any private party to draw water from the public conduits; and all those to whom the right to draw water has been granted shall draw it from the reservoirs, the water-commissioners to direct at what points, within the City, private parties may suitably erect reservoirs for the purpose of drawing from them the water which they had received at the hands of the water-commissioner from some public reservoir; and no one of those to whom a right to draw water from the public conduits has been granted shall have the right to use a larger pipe than a quinaria[5] for a space of fifty feet from the reservoir

  1. Cf. 36.
  2. Cf. 24ff.
  3. Cf. 26ff. and 36.
  4. Cf. 26, and footnote 2 on p. 364.
  5. Cf. 25 and footnote.
439