1 The child went away quite enchanted with him.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 2 The child asleep on the floor woke up, and began to cry.
3 In spite of her eighteen years, she looked almost a little girl--almost a child.
4 Lizaveta was younger than the old woman and was her half-sister, being the child of a different mother.
5 The youngest child, a girl of six, was asleep, sitting curled up on the floor with her head on the sofa.
6 He was a child about seven years old, walking into the country with his father on the evening of a holiday.
7 After the usual proceedings the matter ended, but, later on, information was given that the child had been.
8 What the student expressed most surprise and amusement about was the fact that Lizaveta was continually with child.
9 Raskolnikov could distinguish the child's thin but pretty little face, looking at him with a bright childish smile.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 10 She was always shy in such circumstances and was always afraid of new people, she had been as a child and was even more so now.
11 Unexpectedly finding the room full of people, she was not so much embarrassed as completely overwhelmed with shyness, like a little child.
12 Now she was a modestly and poorly-dressed young girl, very young, indeed, almost like a child, with a modest and refined manner, with a candid but somewhat frightened-looking face.
13 We have three little children and Katerina Ivanovna is at work from morning till night; she is scrubbing and cleaning and washing the children, for she's been used to cleanliness from a child.
14 At that moment a whole party of revellers already drunk came in from the street, and the sounds of a hired concertina and the cracked piping voice of a child of seven singing "The Hamlet" were heard in the entry.
15 The student chattered on, saying that she had a sister Lizaveta, whom the wretched little creature was continually beating, and kept in complete bondage like a small child, though Lizaveta was at least six feet high.
16 The agonised, wasted, consumptive face, the parched blood-stained lips, the hoarse voice, the tears unrestrained as a child's, the trustful, childish and yet despairing prayer for help were so piteous that everyone seemed to feel for her.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 5: CHAPTER III 17 Of late she had begun to talk more than ever to her eldest girl, Polenka, a child of ten, who, though there was much she did not understand, understood very well that her mother needed her, and so always watched her with her big clever eyes and strove her utmost to appear to understand.
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