1 And what thoughts he sometimes had; hm.
2 Though who can tell, maybe it's sometimes for the worse.
3 I sometimes wake up at night; so I'll go in and look at him.
4 He was sometimes uproarious and was reputed to be of great physical strength.
5 I sometimes speak too much from the heart, so that Dounia finds fault with me.
6 When he had happened to imagine all this beforehand, he had sometimes thought that he would be very much afraid.
7 They sometimes pulled their hands out of his huge bony paws, but far from noticing what was the matter, he drew them all the closer to him.
8 He was not completely unconscious, however, all the time he was ill; he was in a feverish state, sometimes delirious, sometimes half conscious.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 9 At these moments he would become conscious that his ideas were sometimes in a tangle and that he was very weak; for two days he had scarcely tasted food.
10 There was no limit to his drinking powers, but he could abstain from drink altogether; he sometimes went too far in his pranks; but he could do without pranks altogether.
11 Some of them he liked and tried to clutch at, but they faded and all the while there was an oppression within him, but it was not overwhelming, sometimes it was even pleasant.
12 And the peasants would beat them so cruelly, sometimes even about the nose and eyes, and he felt so sorry, so sorry for them that he almost cried, and his mother always used to take him away from the window.
13 He had got completely away from everyone, like a tortoise in its shell, and even the sight of a servant girl who had to wait upon him and looked sometimes into his room made him writhe with nervous irritation.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 14 Pyotr Petrovitch, who had made his way up from insignificance, was morbidly given to self-admiration, had the highest opinion of his intelligence and capacities, and sometimes even gloated in solitude over his image in the glass.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 4: CHAPTER III 15 In spite of their predisposition to obedience very many of them, through a playfulness of nature, sometimes vouchsafed even to the cow, like to imagine themselves advanced people, 'destroyers,' and to push themselves into the 'new movement,' and this quite sincerely.
16 And please don't think I am doing you a service; quite the contrary, as soon as you came in, I saw how you could help me; to begin with, I am weak in spelling, and secondly, I am sometimes utterly adrift in German, so that I make it up as I go along for the most part.
17 Of course, they might have a thrashing sometimes for letting their fancy run away with them and to teach them their place, but no more; in fact, even this isn't necessary as they castigate themselves, for they are very conscientious: some perform this service for one another and others chastise themselves with their own hands.
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