1 I was standing at the gate with them.
2 Luckily for him, everything went well again at the gates.
3 And by now he was near; here was the house, here was the gate.
4 Reaching the house where he lived, he nodded to Lebeziatnikov and went in at the gate.
5 Raskolnikov hastened to the gate and looked in to see whether he would look round and sign to him.
6 A card was fixed on the gate and a notice stuck in the windows over the canal advertising it to let.
7 There was a continual coming and going through the two gates and in the two courtyards of the house.
8 On waking up he chanced to go to the window, and at once saw Sonia in the distance at the hospital gate.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 9 On reaching the house where she lodged, Sonia turned in at the gate; he followed her, seeming rather surprised.
10 She used to see him on holidays at the prison gates or in the guard-room, to which he was brought for a few minutes to see her.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 11 He had not far to go; he knew indeed how many steps it was from the gate of his lodging house: exactly seven hundred and thirty.
12 He was walking with three friends, who left him only at the gate, and he asked the porters to direct him, in the presence of the friends.
13 At the great closed gates of the house, a little man stood with his shoulder leaning against them, wrapped in a grey soldier's coat, with a copper Achilles helmet on his head.
14 The man stole a look at him from under his brows and he looked at him attentively, deliberately; then he turned slowly and went out of the gate into the street without saying a word.
15 All our acquaintances avoided us, nobody even bowed to us in the street, and I learnt that some shopmen and clerks were intending to insult us in a shameful way, smearing the gates of our house with pitch, so that the landlord began to tell us we must leave.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 16 At that very moment, as though expressly for his benefit, a huge waggon of hay had just driven in at the gate, completely screening him as he passed under the gateway, and the waggon had scarcely had time to drive through into the yard, before he had slipped in a flash to the right.