1 His head swam and ached with fever.
2 "He's been in a fever since yesterday," she added.
3 She returned home and took to her bed; now she is in a fever.
4 Her eyes glittered as in fever and looked about with a harsh immovable stare.
5 After some hours' sleep the fever left him, but he woke up late, two o'clock in the afternoon.
6 A dreadful chill came over him; but the chill was from the fever that had begun long before in his sleep.
7 His nervous shudder had passed into a fever that made him feel shivering; in spite of the heat he felt cold.
8 It was the portrait of his landlady's daughter, who had died of fever, that strange girl who had wanted to be a nun.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VII 9 At last he was conscious of his former fever and shivering, and he realised with relief that he could lie down on the sofa.
10 He did not yet dare to express his joy fully, but he was in a fever of excitement as though a ton-weight had fallen off his heart.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 4: CHAPTER III 11 Afterwards reflecting upon it, he remembered that half waking up in his fever, he had grasped all this tightly in his hand and so fallen asleep again.
12 She told us at once that you were lying in a high fever and had just run away from the doctor in delirium, and they were looking for you in the streets.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 3: CHAPTER III 13 And if he were not lying in high fever it was perhaps just because this continual inner strain helped to keep him on his legs and in possession of his faculties.
14 That night he woke up before morning among some bushes in Krestovsky Island, trembling all over with fever; he walked home, and it was early morning when he arrived.
15 The sun shone straight in his eyes, so that it hurt him to look out of them, and he felt his head going round--as a man in a fever is apt to feel when he comes out into the street on a bright sunny day.
16 She has been in a sort of fever for the last few days, and has already made a regular plan for your becoming in the end an associate and even a partner in Pyotr Petrovitch's business, which might well be, seeing that you are a student of law.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 17 "So my reason has not quite deserted me, so I still have some sense and memory, since I guessed it of myself," he thought triumphantly, with a deep sigh of relief; "it's simply the weakness of fever, a moment's delirium," and he tore the whole lining out of the left pocket of his trousers.
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