1 His eyes shone with feverish brilliance.
2 He sank into a state of feverish excitement.
3 Sonia spent the whole night feverish and delirious.
4 His brows were knitted, his lips compressed, his eyes feverish.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 3: CHAPTER III 5 His eyes were hard, feverish and piercing, his lips were twitching.
6 Shaking with feverish chill he bent down to examine the bed: there was nothing.
7 He was sitting with compressed lips, his feverish eyes fixed on Porfiry Petrovitch's.
8 When he was better, he remembered the dreams he had had while he was feverish and delirious.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 9 And his drowsiness and stupefaction were followed by an extraordinary, feverish, as it were distracted haste.
10 When Dounia returned from her last interview with her brother, she had found her mother already ill, in feverish delirium.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 11 His head felt rather dizzy; a sort of savage energy gleamed suddenly in his feverish eyes and his wasted, pale and yellow face.
12 He was dozing off; the feverish shiver had ceased, when suddenly something seemed to run over his arm and leg under the bedclothes.
13 Raskolnikov, white as a handkerchief, had answered sharply, jerkily, without dropping his black feverish eyes before Ilya Petrovitch's stare.
14 He was not completely unconscious, however, all the time he was ill; he was in a feverish state, sometimes delirious, sometimes half conscious.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 15 After a fatiguing day spent in continual fancies, in joyful day-dreams and tears, Pulcheria Alexandrovna was taken ill in the night and by morning she was feverish and delirious.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 16 He walked down slowly and deliberately, feverish but not conscious of it, entirely absorbed in a new overwhelming sensation of life and strength that surged up suddenly within him.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 17 She jumped up from time to time, wept and wrung her hands, then sank again into feverish sleep and dreamt of Polenka, Katerina Ivanovna and Lizaveta, of reading the gospel and him.
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