1 He came here at once after his wife's funeral.
2 I will undertake all the arrangements, the funeral and that.
3 I have to be at the funeral of that man who was run over, of whom you.
4 I saw her first on the very day of the funeral, an hour after she was buried.
5 The preparations for the funeral dinner at Katerina Ivanovna's excited his curiosity as he passed.
6 Nearly ten of the twenty roubles, given by Raskolnikov for Marmeladov's funeral, were wasted upon it.
7 He remembered that Katerina Ivanovna's funeral had been fixed for that day, and was glad that he was not present at it.
8 He would be too late for the funeral, of course, but he would be in time for the memorial dinner, and there at once he would see Sonia.
9 The day before yesterday I did not know that he was staying here, in your room, and that consequently on the very day we quarrelled--the day before yesterday--he saw me give Katerina Ivanovna some money for the funeral, as a friend of the late Mr. Marmeladov.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 5: CHAPTER III 10 Yesterday evening, before my mother and sister and in his presence, I declared that I had given the money to Katerina Ivanovna for the funeral and not to Sofya Semyonovna and that I had no acquaintance with Sofya Semyonovna and had never seen her before, indeed.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 5: CHAPTER III 11 Katerina Ivanovna was greatly delighted to see him, in the first place, because he was the one "educated visitor, and, as everyone knew, was in two years to take a professorship in the university," and secondly because he immediately and respectfully apologised for having been unable to be at the funeral.
12 Katerina Ivanovna was irritated too by the fact that hardly any of the lodgers invited had come to the funeral, except the Pole who had just managed to run into the cemetery, while to the memorial dinner the poorest and most insignificant of them had turned up, the wretched creatures, many of them not quite sober.
13 I was confirmed in that belief by the testimony of my own eyes in the lodging of a drunken man who was run over and has since died, to whose daughter, a young woman of notorious behaviour, he gave twenty-five roubles on the pretext of the funeral, which gravely surprised me knowing what pains you were at to raise that sum.
14 Razumihin somehow discovered and proved that while Raskolnikov was at the university he had helped a poor consumptive fellow student and had spent his last penny on supporting him for six months, and when this student died, leaving a decrepit old father whom he had maintained almost from his thirteenth year, Raskolnikov had got the old man into a hospital and paid for his funeral when he died.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII