1 He found it hard to fix his mind on anything at that moment.
2 He left the girl for a moment and walked towards the gentleman.
3 "And what if I am wrong," he cried suddenly after a moment's thought.
4 An expression of the profoundest disgust gleamed for a moment in the young man's refined face.
5 But even at that moment he had a dim foreboding that this happier frame of mind was also not normal.
6 There are chance meetings with strangers that interest us from the first moment, before a word is spoken.
7 He is a very busy man and is in a great hurry to get to Petersburg, so that every moment is precious to him.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 8 Till that moment he had never been into a tavern, but now he felt giddy and was tormented by a burning thirst.
9 At that moment something seemed to sting Raskolnikov; in an instant a complete revulsion of feeling came over him.
10 His words had created a certain impression; there was a moment of silence; but soon laughter and oaths were heard again.
11 His bitterness grew more and more intense, and if he had happened to meet Mr. Luzhin at the moment, he might have murdered him.
12 The woman seeing a stranger stopped indifferently facing him, coming to herself for a moment and apparently wondering what he had come for.
13 His mother's letter had been a torture to him, but as regards the chief fact in it, he had felt not one moment's hesitation, even whilst he was reading the letter.
14 The little room into which the young man walked, with yellow paper on the walls, geraniums and muslin curtains in the windows, was brightly lighted up at that moment by the setting sun.
15 At that moment a whole party of revellers already drunk came in from the street, and the sounds of a hired concertina and the cracked piping voice of a child of seven singing "The Hamlet" were heard in the entry.
16 It had a poverty-stricken appearance with its dusty yellow paper peeling off the walls, and it was so low-pitched that a man of more than average height was ill at ease in it and felt every moment that he would knock his head against the ceiling.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 17 He was so weary after a whole month of concentrated wretchedness and gloomy excitement that he longed to rest, if only for a moment, in some other world, whatever it might be; and, in spite of the filthiness of the surroundings, he was glad now to stay in the tavern.
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