1 I should forget, he would forgive.
2 You will have to forgive me so much.
3 I shall die easier with your forgiveness, he read.
4 Alexey Alexandrovitch, forgive me, I have no right.
5 Only one thing I want: forgive me, forgive me quite.
6 And the happiness of forgiveness has revealed to me my duty.
7 Remember one thing, that I needed nothing but forgiveness, and I want nothing more.
8 Our Lord and God, Jesus Christ, in the abundance and riches of His lovingkindness, forgives this child.
9 And connecting this saying with his forgiveness of her, with his devotion to the children, he understood it now in his own way.
10 If she was really in danger, and wished to see him before her death, he would forgive her if he found her alive, and pay her the last duties if he came too late.
11 He did not think that the Christian law that he had been all his life trying to follow, enjoined on him to forgive and love his enemies; but a glad feeling of love and forgiveness for his enemies filled his heart.
12 He did not think that the Christian law that he had been all his life trying to follow, enjoined on him to forgive and love his enemies; but a glad feeling of love and forgiveness for his enemies filled his heart.
13 And pity for her, and remorse for having desired her death, and most of all, the joy of forgiveness, made him at once conscious, not simply of the relief of his own sufferings, but of a spiritual peace he had never experienced before.
14 he said, feeling with confusion and annoyance that what he could decide easily and clearly by himself, he could not discuss before Princess Tverskaya, who to him stood for the incarnation of that brute force which would inevitably control him in the life he led in the eyes of the world, and hinder him from giving way to his feeling of love and forgiveness.