1 But for the first minute she felt it too bitter.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 5: CHAPTER III 2 She could not control herself and began crying bitterly.
3 "I ought to have known it," he thought with a bitter smile.
4 "Not to steal and not to murder, don't be anxious," he smiled bitterly.
5 "Well, after that I can understand your living like this," Raskolnikov said with a bitter smile.
6 And suddenly a strange, surprising sensation of a sort of bitter hatred for Sonia passed through his heart.
7 It was the deliverance from another feeling, darker and more bitter, which he could not himself have defined.
8 Suddenly he stopped; a new utterly unexpected and exceedingly simple question perplexed and bitterly confounded him.
9 His bitterness grew more and more intense, and if he had happened to meet Mr. Luzhin at the moment, he might have murdered him.
10 She looked at him with unutterable reproach, tried to say something, but could not speak and broke into bitter, bitter sobs, hiding her face in her hands.
11 Then she came straight from the Cathedral to us, told us the whole story, wept bitterly and, fully penitent, she embraced Dounia and besought her to forgive her.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 12 But there was such accumulated bitterness and contempt in the young man's heart, that, in spite of all the fastidiousness of youth, he minded his rags least of all in the street.
13 Almost from the first, while he read the letter, Raskolnikov's face was wet with tears; but when he finished it, his face was pale and distorted and a bitter, wrathful and malignant smile was on his lips.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 14 Incongruous as it was with his mood and his circumstances, he felt that strange and bitter sweet sensation that every author experiences the first time he sees himself in print; besides, he was only twenty-three.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VII 15 The light soon died away, but the look of suffering remained, and Zossimov, watching and studying his patient with all the zest of a young doctor beginning to practise, noticed in him no joy at the arrival of his mother and sister, but a sort of bitter, hidden determination to bear another hour or two of inevitable torture.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 3: CHAPTER III 16 Nothing would have convinced Pyotr Petrovitch that Andrey Semyonovitch could really look on the money unmoved, and the latter, on his side, kept thinking bitterly that Pyotr Petrovitch was capable of entertaining such an idea about him and was, perhaps, glad of the opportunity of teasing his young friend by reminding him of his inferiority and the great difference between them.