1 And now, bare walls, no furniture; it seemed strange.
2 Everything was very clean; the floor and the furniture were brightly polished; everything shone.
3 There his progress was barred by some porters who were engaged in moving furniture out of a flat.
4 Dounia was looking about her mistrustfully, but saw nothing special in the furniture or position of the rooms.
5 They are very good people, very kind," answered Sonia, who still seemed bewildered, "and all the furniture, everything.
6 There was scarcely any furniture in the big room: in the corner on the right was a bedstead, beside it, nearest the door, a chair.
7 She began to prepare for his coming, began to do up her room for him, to clean the furniture, to wash and put up new hangings and so on.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 8 In the same way the upholsterers refused to return a single rouble of the instalment paid for the furniture purchased but not yet removed to the flat.
9 Raskolnikov got up and walked into the other room where the strong box, the bed, and the chest of drawers had been; the room seemed to him very tiny without furniture in it.
10 The furniture was in keeping with the room: there were three old chairs, rather rickety; a painted table in the corner on which lay a few manuscripts and books; the dust that lay thick upon them showed that they had been long untouched.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 11 His study was a room neither large nor small, furnished with a large writing-table, that stood before a sofa, upholstered in checked material, a bureau, a bookcase in the corner and several chairs--all government furniture, of polished yellow wood.
12 The furniture, all very old and of yellow wood, consisted of a sofa with a huge bent wooden back, an oval table in front of the sofa, a dressing-table with a looking-glass fixed on it between the windows, chairs along the walls and two or three half-penny prints in yellow frames, representing German damsels with birds in their hands--that was all.