1 He finished eating it as he walked away.
2 The young man was hastening away without uttering a word.
3 He then walked slowly another ten paces away and again halted.
4 Now he has walked away a little, and is standing still, pretending to make a cigarette.
5 She married her first husband, an infantry officer, for love, and ran away with him from her father's house.
6 I saw him myself watching her and following her, but I prevented him, and he is just waiting for me to go away.
7 One woman seized him by the hand and would have taken him away, but he tore himself from her and ran back to the mare.
8 And yet on the further side of the boulevard, about fifteen paces away, a gentleman was standing on the edge of the pavement.
9 About two months before, they had met in the street, but Raskolnikov had turned away and even crossed to the other side that he might not be observed.
10 He looked angrily at him, though he tried to escape his notice, and stood impatiently biding his time, till the unwelcome man in rags should have moved away.
11 He looked at the old woman, and was in no hurry to get away, as though there was still something he wanted to say or to do, but he did not himself quite know what.
12 She opened her eyes fully all of a sudden, looked at him intently, as though realising something, got up from the seat and walked away in the direction from which she had come.
13 At the tables and the barrows, at the booths and the shops, all the market people were closing their establishments or clearing away and packing up their wares and, like their customers, were going home.
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 He had got completely away from everyone, like a tortoise in its shell, and even the sight of a servant girl who had to wait upon him and looked sometimes into his room made him writhe with nervous irritation.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 16 The young man took it, and was so angry that he was on the point of going away; but checked himself at once, remembering that there was nowhere else he could go, and that he had had another object also in coming.
17 And now look there: I don't know that dandy with whom I was going to fight, I see him for the first time, but he, too, has seen her on the road, just now, drunk, not knowing what she is doing, and now he is very eager to get hold of her, to get her away somewhere while she is in this state.
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