1 They stared in each other's faces.
2 He pushed his way into the thickest part of it, looking at the faces.
3 The old woman stood facing him in silence and looking inquiringly at him.
4 The inner door was thrown wide open and inquisitive faces were peering in at it.
5 All who met him were loathsome to him--he loathed their faces, their movements, their gestures.
6 Raskolnikov did not sit down, but he felt unwilling to leave her, and stood facing her in perplexity.
7 Coarse laughing faces with pipes and cigarettes and heads wearing caps thrust themselves in at the doorway.
8 He got up, staggered, took up his jug and glass, and sat down beside the young man, facing him a little sideways.
9 He closed his hand on the twenty copecks, walked on for ten paces, and turned facing the Neva, looking towards the palace.
10 He scarcely looked at the passers-by, tried to escape looking at their faces at all, and to be as little noticeable as possible.
11 His face wore that perpetual look of peevish dejection, which is so sourly printed on all faces of Jewish race without exception.
12 They were both pale and thin; but those sick pale faces were bright with the dawn of a new future, of a full resurrection into a new life.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 13 The woman seeing a stranger stopped indifferently facing him, coming to herself for a moment and apparently wondering what he had come for.
14 But there was nothing of the sort: he saw only the faces of clerks absorbed in petty details, then other people, no one seemed to have any concern with him.
15 I don't know how you feel about female faces, but to my mind these sixteen years, these childish eyes, shyness and tears of bashfulness are better than beauty; and she is a perfect little picture, too.
16 All his ideas now seemed to be circling round some single point, and he felt that there really was such a point, and that now, now, he was left facing that point--and for the first time, indeed, during the last two months.
17 Several persons came in too from the Kapernaumovs' room; the landlord, a lame one-eyed man of strange appearance with whiskers and hair that stood up like a brush, his wife, a woman with an everlastingly scared expression, and several open-mouthed children with wonder-struck faces.
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