1 She said nothing, she only looked at me without a word.
2 Her eyes glittered as in fever and looked about with a harsh immovable stare.
3 There was another man in the room who looked somewhat like a retired government clerk.
4 But his sleep had not refreshed him; he waked up bilious, irritable, ill-tempered, and looked with hatred at his room.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 5 The young man must have looked at her with a rather peculiar expression, for a gleam of mistrust came into her eyes again.
6 Like a clerk, he wore no beard, nor moustache, but had been so long unshaven that his chin looked like a stiff greyish brush.
7 But no one shared his enjoyment: his silent companion looked with positive hostility and mistrust at all these manifestations.
8 Such was the impression made on Raskolnikov by the person sitting a little distance from him, who looked like a retired clerk.
9 This habit develops into a necessity in some drunkards, and especially in those who are looked after sharply and kept in order at home.
10 At the same time her large dark eyes, which looked larger still from the thinness of her frightened face, were watching her mother with alarm.
11 With a sinking heart and a nervous tremor, he went up to a huge house which on one side looked on to the canal, and on the other into the street.
12 He looked repeatedly at the clerk, partly no doubt because the latter was staring persistently at him, obviously anxious to enter into conversation.
13 He looked at the old woman, and was in no hurry to get away, as though there was still something he wanted to say or to do, but he did not himself quite know what.
14 Round her thin long neck, which looked like a hen's leg, was knotted some sort of flannel rag, and, in spite of the heat, there hung flapping on her shoulders, a mangy fur cape, yellow with age.
15 He had got completely away from everyone, like a tortoise in its shell, and even the sight of a servant girl who had to wait upon him and looked sometimes into his room made him writhe with nervous irritation.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 16 At the other persons in the room, including the tavern-keeper, the clerk looked as though he were used to their company, and weary of it, showing a shade of condescending contempt for them as persons of station and culture inferior to his own, with whom it would be useless for him to converse.
17 "It's in the houses of spiteful old widows that one finds such cleanliness," Raskolnikov thought again, and he stole a curious glance at the cotton curtain over the door leading into another tiny room, in which stood the old woman's bed and chest of drawers and into which he had never looked before.
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