1 "A student then, or formerly a student," cried the clerk.
2 "There's a phenomenon for you," cried the student and he laughed.
3 "Listen, I want to ask you a serious question," the student said hotly.
4 All at once he heard the student mention to the officer the pawnbroker Alyona Ivanovna and give him her address.
5 What the student expressed most surprise and amusement about was the fact that Lizaveta was continually with child.
6 Almost beside him at the next table there was sitting a student, whom he did not know and had never seen, and with him a young officer.
7 My name is Vrazumihin, at your service; not Razumihin, as I am always called, but Vrazumihin, a student and gentleman; and he is my friend.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 8 I could kill that damned old woman and make off with her money, I assure you, without the faintest conscience-prick, the student added with warmth.
9 "Raskolnikov, a student, I came here a month ago," the young man made haste to mutter, with a half bow, remembering that he ought to be more polite.
10 The student spoke about her with a peculiar relish and was continually laughing and the officer listened with great interest and asked him to send Lizaveta to do some mending for him.
11 Mechanically he drew from a chair beside him his old student's winter coat, which was still warm though almost in rags, covered himself up with it and once more sank into drowsiness and delirium.
12 In the previous winter a student he knew called Pokorev, who had left for Harkov, had chanced in conversation to give him the address of Alyona Ivanovna, the old pawnbroker, in case he might want to pawn anything.
13 The student chattered on, saying that she had a sister Lizaveta, whom the wretched little creature was continually beating, and kept in complete bondage like a small child, though Lizaveta was at least six feet high.
14 Of course it was a chance, but he could not shake off a very extraordinary impression, and here someone seemed to be speaking expressly for him; the student began telling his friend various details about Alyona Ivanovna.
15 Often he went to sleep on it, as he was, without undressing, without sheets, wrapped in his old student's overcoat, with his head on one little pillow, under which he heaped up all the linen he had, clean and dirty, by way of a bolster.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 16 She has been in a sort of fever for the last few days, and has already made a regular plan for your becoming in the end an associate and even a partner in Pyotr Petrovitch's business, which might well be, seeing that you are a student of law.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 17 Only, seeing that you are not a student now and have lost your lessons and your clothes, and that through the young lady's death she has no need to treat you as a relation, she suddenly took fright; and as you hid in your den and dropped all your old relations with her, she planned to get rid of you.
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