1 It was impossible for him to carry the axe through the street in his hands.
2 He passed quickly through the gateway and turned to the left in the street.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 3 This evening, however, on coming out into the street, he became acutely aware of his fears.
4 In the street the heat was insufferable again; not a drop of rain had fallen all those days.
5 To go into the street, to go a walk for appearance sake was revolting; to go back to his room, even more revolting.
6 "Sonia wants pomatum too," he said as he walked along the street, and he laughed malignantly--"such smartness costs money.
7 Afterwards he had added to the wood a thin smooth piece of iron, which he had also picked up at the same time in the street.
8 He was so badly dressed that even a man accustomed to shabbiness would have been ashamed to be seen in the street in such rags.
9 Fearful, despairing cries rose shrilly from the street, sounds which he heard every night, indeed, under his window after two o'clock.
10 With a sinking heart and a nervous tremor, he went up to a huge house which on one side looked on to the canal, and on the other into the street.
11 About two months before, they had met in the street, but Raskolnikov had turned away and even crossed to the other side that he might not be observed.
12 He walked along the pavement like a drunken man, regardless of the passers-by, and jostling against them, and only came to his senses when he was in the next street.
13 But there was such accumulated bitterness and contempt in the young man's heart, that, in spite of all the fastidiousness of youth, he minded his rags least of all in the street.
14 The girl seemed hardly to know what she was doing; she crossed one leg over the other, lifting it indecorously, and showed every sign of being unconscious that she was in the street.
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 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 17 The heat in the street was terrible: and the airlessness, the bustle and the plaster, scaffolding, bricks, and dust all about him, and that special Petersburg stench, so familiar to all who are unable to get out of town in summer--all worked painfully upon the young man's already overwrought nerves.
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