The Body Thieves In
the early nineteenth century in Britain, many improvements were being made in
the world of medicine. Doctors and Surgeons were becoming more knowledgeable
about the human body. Illnesses that had been fatal a few years before were now
curable. However, Surgeons had one problem. They needed dead bodies to cut up,
or dissect (解剖). This was the only way that they could learn about the flesh and
bones inside the body, and the only way to teach new surgeons to carry out
operations. The job of finding these dead bodies was carried
out by an unpleasant group of people called "body snatchers". They went into
graveyards (墓地) at night and, using wooden shovels to make less noise, dug up
any recently buried bodies. Then they took the bodies to the medical schools and
sold them. A body could be sold for between £5 and 10, which was a lot of money
at that time. The doctors who paid the body snatchers had all agreement with
them—they never asked any questions. They did not desire to know where the
bodies came from, as long as they kept arriving. The most
famous of these body snatchers were two men from Edinburgh called William Burke
and William Hare. Burke and Hare were different because they did not just dig up
bodies from graveyards. They got greedy and thought of all easier way to find
bodies. Instead of digging them up, they killed the poorer guests in
Hare’s small hotel. Dr. Knox, the respected surgeon they worked for, never asked
why all the bodies they brought him had been strangled (勒死).
For many years Burke and Hare were not caught because, unsurprisingly, the
bodies of their victims were never found by the police. They were eventually
arrested and put on trial in 1829. The judge showed mercy to Hare and he was
released but Burke Was found guilty and his punishment was to be hanged.
Appropriately, his body Was given to the medical school and he ended up on the
dissecting table, just like his victims. In one small way, justice was
done. Now, over 150 years later, surgeons do not need the help
of criminals to learn their skills. However, the science of surgery could not
have developed without their rather gruesome (令人毛骨悚然的) help. Burk and Hare differed from other body snatchers in that ______.
A. they got other people to dig up bodies for them
B. they sold the bodies only to one surgeon
C. they dug up bodies not just from graveyards
D. they resorted to murder to get bodies