1 I have an uncle living with me now.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 2 There are a lot of people living there besides ourselves.
3 God give peace to the dead, the living have still to live.
4 But I am living outside for the time, I had to have some repairs done here.
5 Things have happened there, and there are all sorts of queer people living there.
6 Allow me to explain that I have been living with her for nearly three years and at first.
7 A modern cultivated man would prefer prison to living with such strangers as our peasants.
8 "Well, after that I can understand your living like this," Raskolnikov said with a bitter smile.
9 She had a relation, a niece I believe, living with her, a deaf and dumb girl of fifteen, or perhaps not more than fourteen.
10 Remember, dear boy, how in your childhood, when your father was living, you used to lisp your prayers at my knee, and how happy we all were in those days.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 11 In the first place, would you have guessed, dear Rodya, that your sister has been living with me for the last six weeks and we shall not be separated in the future.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 12 This house was let out in tiny tenements and was inhabited by working people of all kinds--tailors, locksmiths, cooks, Germans of sorts, girls picking up a living as best they could, petty clerks, etc.
13 herself, she wrote to her father and mother that she wouldn't go on living conventionally and was entering on a free marriage and it was said that that was too harsh, that she might have spared them and have written more kindly.
14 I was joking of course, but look here; on one side we have a stupid, senseless, worthless, spiteful, ailing, horrid old woman, not simply useless but doing actual mischief, who has not an idea what she is living for herself, and who will die in a day or two in any case.
15 The lodgers, one after another, squeezed back into the doorway with that strange inner feeling of satisfaction which may be observed in the presence of a sudden accident, even in those nearest and dearest to the victim, from which no living man is exempt, even in spite of the sincerest sympathy and compassion.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 16 Katerina Ivanovna determined now to invite this lady and her daughter, "whose foot she was not worth," and who had turned away haughtily when she casually met them, so that they might know that "she was more noble in her thoughts and feelings and did not harbour malice," and might see that she was not accustomed to her way of living.
17 "Since then, sir," he went on after a brief pause--"Since then, owing to an unfortunate occurrence and through information given by evil-intentioned persons--in all which Darya Frantsovna took a leading part on the pretext that she had been treated with want of respect--since then my daughter Sofya Semyonovna has been forced to take a yellow ticket, and owing to that she is unable to go on living with us.
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