Henry Fielding, the famous novelist who was also 26)8 V8 u! z8 _4 V8 Q- ~
a London magistrate, once made
' {0 @# T. h }( e/ e, ~& W5 x Q a night raid to two known hideouts in this city-within-a-city; he found seven men,5 I. q" u% b! f. v
women, and children packed away in a few tiny 27)
, j) H# M7 c3 y p stinking rooms. All of these people,
* S3 [' d4 D& H8 @ included little children of five and six who were trained as pick-pockets, were wanted7 x2 ?* H% x$ R3 @! o) Q, y' _9 i
for crime. Conditions like these bred more criminals. One of the 28)
1 I% C, B2 y6 a typical cases was that Jack Shepard, whose execution in 1724 was watched by two hundred thousand people. Shepard, the son of honest working people, was an 29)
5 Z, E% A3 e/ M" l8 j apprentice in a respectful trade. He ran away from it because he fancied that he had been ill-treated, and soon 30)
5 J" _- h* A/ `0 y; q8 B found it was easy to make more money by thieving 31)6 K7 L" [8 }& O0 W' `2 X) {
as his father had done by a lifetime of honest work. 32)
8 ]5 I9 s/ h6 J1 z In Shepard’s day highwaymen committed robberies at broad daylight, in sight of a crowd, and rode solemnly and 33)
5 y7 Y7 {) d) y9 M triumphantly through the town with danger of molestation. If they were chased, twenty or thirty armed men were ready34)
% P( p: `6 i* `; q to come to their assistance. Murder was a everyday affair, 35)
$ k" u. T9 z' U- U& T and there were many people who made heroes from the murderers.3 N6 |5 B% H9 F7 G
答案:
8 R2 S: |* a# a) H' g4 L# B% r; n 26.to * on
6 |. {* M" L9 ?, I# z& o4 G+ G7 F 27.included * including
; ^; l0 ` ]& R6 M2 S 28.Jack * of Jack
. D. O5 {5 `2 E0 b 29.respectful * respectable
* T8 l/ I. A: K" J 30.was easy * easy
5 h6 \; o3 A) N7 G8 I 31.as * than$ [ C/ I$ T" t, c
32.at * in
, v8 A2 [5 X1 E( s. ^2 V6 B6 I 33.with * without
* s% u+ _" ^/ \ 34.a * an7 [+ d. Z4 m* j, ^& h- k3 b0 y
35.from * of |