1 Then the third storey and the fourth.
2 he thought, as he reached the fourth floor.
3 They went in from the yard and up to the fourth storey.
4 Then they turned and went on up to the fourth floor, talking loudly.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 5 It had lately been moved to new rooms on the fourth floor of a new house.
6 It's in the fourth gospel, she whispered sternly, without looking at him.
7 And there was the fourth storey, here was the door, here was the flat opposite, the empty one.
8 This German was moving out then, and so the fourth floor on this staircase would be untenanted except by the old woman.
9 He went into that room--the fourth in order; it was a small room and packed full of people, rather better dressed than in the outer rooms.
10 He went into the house, passed through the gateway, then into the first entrance on the right, and began mounting the familiar staircase to the fourth storey.
11 But the six whips were attacking her in all directions, and the shaft was raised again and fell upon her a third time, then a fourth, with heavy measured blows.
12 And in the fourth or fifth century she would have walked away into the Egyptian desert and would have stayed there thirty years living on roots and ecstasies and visions.
13 At last when the unknown was mounting to the fourth floor, he suddenly started, and succeeded in slipping neatly and quickly back into the flat and closing the door behind him.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 14 The ladies slowly followed Razumihin, who went on before, and when they reached the landlady's door on the fourth storey, they noticed that her door was a tiny crack open and that two keen black eyes were watching them from the darkness within.