1 If he has a conscience he will suffer for his mistake.
2 Secondly, my conscience is perfectly easy; I make the offer with no ulterior motive.
3 that is not an official right, but an inner right to decide in his own conscience to overstep.
4 If you had anything on your conscience, you certainly ought to insist that you were delirious.
5 But at last he had suddenly felt the same uneasiness again, as though his conscience smote him.
6 But as for your question, I really don't know what to say, though my own conscience is quite at rest on that score.
7 You may think what you like, but I desire now to do all I can to efface that impression and to show that I am a man of heart and conscience.
8 When I heard of all this I wanted to blow him up, too, to clear my conscience, but by that time harmony reigned between me and Pashenka, and I insisted on stopping the whole affair, engaging that you would pay.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 9 But if such a one is forced for the sake of his idea to step over a corpse or wade through blood, he can, I maintain, find within himself, in his conscience, a sanction for wading through blood--that depends on the idea and its dimensions, note that.