1 I'll fetch you a cab and take you home myself.
2 And I will tell Pashenka what is wanted myself.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 3 I am not studying, because I cannot keep myself now, but I shall get money.
4 Yesterday and the day before yesterday and all this time I have been worrying myself.
5 Excuse me, I've very little wit myself," Razumihin cut in sharply, "and so let us drop it.
6 I say my prayers to myself as I am a big girl now, but Kolya and Lida say them aloud with mother.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 7 I saw him myself watching her and following her, but I prevented him, and he is just waiting for me to go away.
8 "I could not, of course, find out so much about it, for I am a stranger in Petersburg myself," Pyotr Petrovitch replied huffily.
9 Mine is an honourable house, Mr. Captain, and honourable behaviour, Mr. Captain, and I always, always dislike any scandal myself.
10 It is because I am very ill," he decided grimly at last, "I have been worrying and fretting myself, and I don't know what I am doing.
11 She said if only I gave her that, she would trust me again, as much as I liked, and that she would never, never--those were her own words--make use of that I O U till I could pay of myself.
12 And meanwhile I am myself cramped for room in a lodging with my friend Andrey Semyonovitch Lebeziatnikov, in the flat of Madame Lippevechsel; it was he who told me of Bakaleyev's house, too.
13 I did make an effort four years ago to give her a course of geography and universal history, but as I was not very well up in those subjects myself and we had no suitable books, and what books we had.
14 For in unfolding to you the story of my life, I do not wish to make myself a laughing-stock before these idle listeners, who indeed know all about it already, but I am looking for a man of feeling and education.
15 For beggary a man is not chased out of human society with a stick, he is swept out with a broom, so as to make it as humiliating as possible; and quite right, too, forasmuch as in beggary I am ready to be the first to humiliate myself.
16 Therefore, in acquiring wealth solely and exclusively for myself, I am acquiring, so to speak, for all, and helping to bring to pass my neighbour's getting a little more than a torn coat; and that not from private, personal liberality, but as a consequence of the general advance.
17 "So my reason has not quite deserted me, so I still have some sense and memory, since I guessed it of myself," he thought triumphantly, with a deep sigh of relief; "it's simply the weakness of fever, a moment's delirium," and he tore the whole lining out of the left pocket of his trousers.
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