1 It's just the same as if I were grinding an organ.
2 She went out of the room and the boy trailed after her with the organ.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER III 3 You have to get a licence for an organ, and you haven't got one, and in that way you collect a crowd.
4 She broke off abruptly on a sentimental high note, shouted sharply to the organ grinder "Come on," and both moved on to the next shop.
5 In spite of the chorus in the other room, she was singing some servants' hall song in a rather husky contralto, to the accompaniment of the organ.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER III 6 A dark-haired young man with a barrel organ was standing in the road in front of a little general shop and was grinding out a very sentimental song.
7 In the room he found also a boy with a little hand organ, a healthy-looking red-cheeked girl of eighteen, wearing a tucked-up striped skirt, and a Tyrolese hat with ribbons.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER III 8 His idea was that there's nothing really wrong with the physical organism of the insane, and that insanity is, so to say, a logical mistake, an error of judgment, an incorrect view of things.
9 But as soon as one is ill, as soon as the normal earthly order of the organism is broken, one begins to realise the possibility of another world; and the more seriously ill one is, the closer becomes one's contact with that other world, so that as soon as the man dies he steps straight into that world.