1 He looked at it and went to the window.
2 He walked to the window and sat down on the window-sill.
3 "I will tell you what I want with you," said Raskolnikov, drawing Razumihin to the window.
4 And he opened the window over the canal, and stood in the window, squealing like a little pig; it was a disgrace.
5 He stopped at each landing and looked round him with curiosity; on the first landing the framework of the window had been taken out.
6 The room was close, but she had not opened the window; a stench rose from the staircase, but the door on to the stairs was not closed.
7 Fearful, despairing cries rose shrilly from the street, sounds which he heard every night, indeed, under his window after two o'clock.
8 He reached the window on the first floor; the moon shone through the panes with a melancholy and mysterious light; then he reached the second floor.
9 He dropped the axe with the blade in the water, snatched a piece of soap that lay in a broken saucer on the window, and began washing his hands in the bucket.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 10 Then he wiped it all with some linen that was hanging to dry on a line in the kitchen and then he was a long while attentively examining the axe at the window.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 11 He started, roused himself, raised his head, looked out of the window, and seeing how late it was, suddenly jumped up wide awake as though someone had pulled him off the sofa.
12 As he went out, Raskolnikov had time to put his hand into his pocket, to snatch up the coppers he had received in exchange for his rouble in the tavern and to lay them unnoticed on the window.
13 Katerina Ivanovna ran to the window; there, on a broken chair in the corner, a large earthenware basin full of water had been stood, in readiness for washing her children's and husband's linen that night.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 14 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.
15 Katerina Ivanovna had just begun, as she always did at every free moment, walking to and fro in her little room from window to stove and back again, with her arms folded across her chest, talking to herself and coughing.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 16 Razumihin, completely put to confusion by upsetting the table and smashing the glass, gazed gloomily at the fragments, cursed and turned sharply to the window where he stood looking out with his back to the company with a fiercely scowling countenance, seeing nothing.
17 Bending over the water, he gazed mechanically at the last pink flush of the sunset, at the row of houses growing dark in the gathering twilight, at one distant attic window on the left bank, flashing as though on fire in the last rays of the setting sun, at the darkening water of the canal, and the water seemed to catch his attention.
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