1 He was amazed at her sudden ecstasy.
2 The workmen looked at him in amazement.
3 The latter drew back, more amazed than offended.
4 And then to his intense amazement he caught the voice of his landlady.
5 Porfiry Petrovitch sank back in his chair, as though he were amazed at the question.
6 His first amazement was followed by a thrill of horror, like a shiver running down his spine.
7 He looked at his fellow prisoners and was amazed to see how they all loved life and prized it.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 8 They sat up whispering till two o'clock, but the girl went to bed much earlier, amazed and rather sorrowful.
9 With the same amazement he stared at Raskolnikov, who lay undressed, dishevelled, unwashed, on his miserable dirty sofa, looking fixedly at him.
10 This seemed to amaze him; he somehow fancied that he would find everything as he left it, even perhaps the corpses in the same places on the floor.
11 In amazement he listened with strained attention to Porfiry Petrovitch who still seemed frightened as he looked after him with friendly solicitude.
12 If he had cared to think a little, he would have been amazed indeed that he could have talked to them like that a minute before, forcing his feelings upon them.
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 With amazement he gazed at himself and everything in the room around him, wondering how he could have come in the night before without fastening the door, and have flung himself on the sofa without undressing, without even taking his hat off.
15 And she had destroyed herself, crushed by an insult that had appalled and amazed that childish soul, had smirched that angel purity with unmerited disgrace and torn from her a last scream of despair, unheeded and brutally disregarded, on a dark night in the cold and wet while the wind howled.