1 No need to go into detail, but we parted.
2 I have come to like that Nikolay and am studying him in detail.
3 From Razumihin, too, I learnt a number of interesting details yesterday.
4 "It's scarcely necessary to go over everything in detail," Porfiry Petrovitch went on.
5 But I don't want to go into all those painful details, so as not to worry you for nothing when it is now all over.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 6 This was the first time she had spoken to him of the project, and she launched out into the most alluring details.
7 For nearly two years I've been scuttling about among the publishers, and now I know every detail of their business.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 4: CHAPTER III 8 But there was nothing of the sort: he saw only the faces of clerks absorbed in petty details, then other people, no one seemed to have any concern with him.
9 I describe all this as it took place, primarily to recall it to your mind and secondly to show you that not the slightest detail has escaped my recollection.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 5: CHAPTER III 10 He remembered every detail of the previous day and he knew that a perfectly novel experience had befallen him, that he had received an impression unlike anything he had known before.
11 One has but to keep all one's will-power and reason to deal with them, and they will all be overcome at the time when once one has familiarised oneself with the minutest details of the business.
12 Razumihin described it in detail again, but this time he added his own conclusions: he openly blamed Raskolnikov for intentionally insulting Pyotr Petrovitch, not seeking to excuse him on the score of his illness.
13 Of course it was a chance, but he could not shake off a very extraordinary impression, and here someone seemed to be speaking expressly for him; the student began telling his friend various details about Alyona Ivanovna.
14 "Nobody asks you for these personal details, sir, we've no time to waste," Ilya Petrovitch interposed roughly and with a note of triumph; but Raskolnikov stopped him hotly, though he suddenly found it exceedingly difficult to speak.
15 "Honoured sir, honoured sir," cried Marmeladov recovering himself--"Oh, sir, perhaps all this seems a laughing matter to you, as it does to others, and perhaps I am only worrying you with the stupidity of all the trivial details of my home life, but it is not a laughing matter to me.
16 At times monstrous images are created, but the setting and the whole picture are so truth-like and filled with details so delicate, so unexpectedly, but so artistically consistent, that the dreamer, were he an artist like Pushkin or Turgenev even, could never have invented them in the waking state.
17 She was extremely glad to escape at last; she went away looking down, hurrying to get out of sight as soon as possible, to walk the twenty steps to the turning on the right and to be at last alone, and then moving rapidly along, looking at no one, noticing nothing, to think, to remember, to meditate on every word, every detail.
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