1 "Going to sleep again," cried Nastasya.
2 Nastasya stared at him in a strange way.
3 Nastasya was overcome with a fit of laughter.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 4 Yes; the porter and Nastasya were standing there.
5 And Nastasya went off into her hysterical giggle.
6 Raskolnikov opened his eyes, started and recognised Nastasya.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 7 Nastasya felt positively offended and began wrathfully rousing him.
8 Nastasya, coming into his room at ten o'clock the next morning, had difficulty in rousing him.
9 Supposing he returned an hour later to put it back, and Nastasya had come back and was on the spot.
10 "Don't you get up then," Nastasya went on compassionately, seeing that he was letting his feet down from the sofa.
11 When the soup had been brought, and he had begun upon it, Nastasya sat down beside him on the sofa and began chatting.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 12 Nastasya was continually out of the house, especially in the evenings; she would run in to the neighbours or to a shop, and always left the door ajar.
13 But what was his amazement when he suddenly saw that Nastasya was not only at home in the kitchen, but was occupied there, taking linen out of a basket and hanging it on a line.
14 Nastasya, the cook and only servant, was rather pleased at the lodger's mood and had entirely given up sweeping and doing his room, only once a week or so she would stray into his room with a broom.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 15 When Nastasya had gone out, he lifted it quickly to his lips and kissed it; then he gazed intently at the address, the small, sloping handwriting, so dear and familiar, of the mother who had once taught him to read and write.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 16 "Twenty to the policeman, three to Nastasya for the letter, so I must have given forty-seven or fifty to the Marmeladovs yesterday," he thought, reckoning it up for some unknown reason, but he soon forgot with what object he had taken the money out of his pocket.
17 When he reached the landlady's kitchen, the door of which was open as usual, he glanced cautiously in to see whether, in Nastasya's absence, the landlady herself was there, or if not, whether the door to her own room was closed, so that she might not peep out when he went in for the axe.
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