大學英語精讀第三冊Unit One講解
導語:法律是統治階級意志的體現,是國家的統治工具。下面YJBYS小編分享一篇關於法律的英語課文,歡迎學習!
TextA young man finds that strolling along the streets without an obvious purpose can lead to trouble with the law. One misunderstanding leads to another until eventually he must appear in court for trial……
A Brush with the Law
I have only once been in trouble with the law. The whole process of being arrested and taken to court was a rather unpleasant experience at the time, but it makes a good story now. What makes it rather disturbing was the arbitrary circumstances both of my arrest and my subsequent fate in court.
In happened in February about twelve years ago. I had left school a couple of months before that and was not due to go to university until the following October. I was still living at home at the time.
One morning I was in Richmond, a suburb of London near where I lived. I was looking for a temporary job so that I could save up some money to go travelling. As it was a fine day and I was in no hurry, I was taking my time, looking in shop windows, strolling in the park, and sometimes just stopping and looking around me. It must have been this obvious aimlessness that led to my downfall.
It was about half past eleven when it happened. I was just walking out of the local library, having unsuccessfully sought employment there, when I saw a man walking across the road with the obvious intention of talking to me. I thought he was going to ask me the time. Instead, he said he was a police officer and he was arresting me. At first I thought it was some kind of joke. But then another policeman appeared, this time in uniform, and I was left in no doubt.
'But what for?' I asked.
"Wandering with intent to commit an arrestable offence,' he said.
'What offence?' I asked.
'Theft,' he said.
'Theft of what?' I asked.
'Milk bottles,' he said, and with a perfectly straight face too!
'Oh,' I said.
It turned out there had been a lot of petty thefts in the area, particularly that of stealing milk bottles from doorsteps.
Then I made my big mistake. At the time I was nineteen, had long untidy hair, and regarded myself as part of the sixties' 'youth countercultrue. As a result, I want to appear cool and unconcerned with the incident, so I said, 'How long have you been following me?' in the most casual and conversation tone I could manage. I thus appeared to them to be quite familiar with this sort of situation, and it confirmed them in their belief that I was a thoroughly disreputable character.
A few minutes later a police car arrived.
'Get in the back," they said. 'Put your hands on the back of the front seat and don't move them.'
They got in on either side of me. I wasn't funny any more.
At the police station they questioned me for several hours. I continued to try to look worldly and au fait with the situation. When they asked me what I had been doing, I told them I'd been looking for a job. 'Aha,' I could see them thinking, 'unemployed'.
Eventually, I was officially charged and told to report to Richmond Magistrates' Court the following Monday. Then they let me go.
I wanted to conduct my own defence in court, but as soon as my father found out what had happened, he hired a very good solicitor. We went along that Monday armed with all kinds of witnesses, including my English teacher from school as a character witness. But he was never called on to give evidence. My 'trial' didn't get that far. The magistrate dismissed the case after fifteen minutes. I was free. The poor police had never stood a chance. The solicitor even succeeded in getting costs awarded against the police.
And so I do not have a criminal record. But what was most shocking at the time was the things my release from the charge so clearly depended on. I had the 'right' accent, respectable middle-class parents in court, reliable witnesses, and I could obviously afford a very good solicitor. Given the obscure nature of the charge, I feel sure that if I had come from a different background, and had really been unemployed, there is every chance that I would have been found guilty. While asking for costs to be awarded, my solicitor's case quite obviously revolved around the fact that I had a 'brilliant academic record'.
Meanwhile, just outside the courtroom, one of the policemen who had arrested me was gloomily complaining to my mother that another youngster had been turned against the police. 'You could have been a bit more helpful when we arrested you,' he said to me reproachfully.
What did the mean? Presumably that I should have looked outraged and said something like, 'Look here, do you know who you're talking to? I am a highly successful student with a brilliant academic record. How dare you arrest me!' Then they, presumably, would have apologized, perhaps even taken off their caps, and let me on my way.
NEW WORDSbrush
n. brief fight or encounter 小衝突;小接觸
process
n. course; method, esp. one used in manufacture 過程;製作法
arbitrary
a. based on one's own opinion only, not on reason 任意的;武斷的
circumstance
n. (usu. pl.) conditions, facts, etc. connected with an event or person 情況,環境
subsequent
a. following, later 隨後的,接下去的
fate
n. what will happen or happened to sb. or sth. 命運
due
a. expected; supposed (to) 預期的;約定的;到期的
temporary
a. lasting only for a limited time 暫時的
stroll
a. walk at leisure 散步,閒逛
obvious
a. easily seen or understood; clear 明顯的,顯而易見的
downfall
n. ruin 垮台;衰落
employment
n. one's regular work or occupation; job 職業;工作
wander
vi. move about without a purpose 閒逛;漫遊
commit
vt. do (sth. wrong, bad, or unlawful)幹(壞事),犯(錯誤、罪)
arrestable
a. deserving to be arrested
offence (AmE offense)
n. crime; the hurting of feelings; something unpleasant 罪行;冒犯;不愉快的事
straight face
a face or expression that shows no emotion, humor, or thought 板着的臉
petty
a. small; unimportant 小的;不足道的
doorstep
n. a step in front of a door
regard
vt. consider in the stated way 把……看作;把認為(as)
counterculture
n. a culture, esp. of the young who oppose the traditional standards and customs of their society 反主流文化
unconcerned
a. not worried; untroubled; indifferent 無憂慮的;淡漠的
casual
a. careless; informal 漫不經心的.,隨便的
conversational
a. of or commonly used in talking 會話(用)的
confirm
vt. make certain; support 證實,肯定;確定
belief
n. something believed; trust 相信;信念;信仰
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