1 The real murderer dropped those ear-rings.
2 Now they've simply taken him for the murderer.
3 am the murderer, repeated Nikolay, after a brief pause.
4 In his changed tone she seemed to hear the murderer speaking.
5 The murderer was upstairs, locked in, when Koch and Pestryakov knocked at the door.
6 Don't cry about me: I'll try to be honest and manly all my life, even if I am a murderer.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VII 7 She was gazing in stupefaction at her murdered sister, white as a sheet and seeming not to have the strength to cry out.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 8 Koch, like an ass, did not stay at the door; so the murderer popped out and ran down, too; for he had no other way of escape.
9 His bitterness grew more and more intense, and if he had happened to meet Mr. Luzhin at the moment, he might have murdered him.
10 The murderer seems to have been a desperate fellow, he risked everything in open daylight, was saved by a miracle--but his hands shook, too.
11 These exclamations and remarks checked Raskolnikov, and the words, "I am a murderer," which were perhaps on the point of dropping from his lips, died away.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 12 All this pointed strongly to the conclusion that Raskolnikov was not quite like an ordinary murderer and robber, but that there was another element in the case.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 13 Well, that we grant, was through illness, but consider this: he is a murderer, but looks upon himself as an honest man, despises others, poses as injured innocence.
14 That's just it; the murderer must have been there and bolted himself in; and they'd have caught him for a certainty if Koch had not been an ass and gone to look for the porter too.
15 The candle-end was flickering out in the battered candlestick, dimly lighting up in the poverty-stricken room the murderer and the harlot who had so strangely been reading together the eternal book.
16 I would have given a thousand roubles at that minute to have seen you with my own eyes, when you walked a hundred paces beside that workman, after he had called you murderer to your face, and you did not dare to ask him a question all the way.
17 He knew, he knew perfectly well that at that moment they were at the flat, that they were greatly astonished at finding it unlocked, as the door had just been fastened, that by now they were looking at the bodies, that before another minute had passed they would guess and completely realise that the murderer had just been there, and had succeeded in hiding somewhere, slipping by them and escaping.
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