1 They borrow on their hundred roubles pension.
2 Give me four roubles for it, I shall redeem it, it was my father's.
3 He got two roubles from her and went into a miserable little tavern on his way home.
4 So that I may very likely be able to send to you not twenty-five, but thirty roubles.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 5 And when you have finished the signature there will be another three roubles for you.
6 Raskolnikov took the German sheets in silence, took the three roubles and without a word went out.
7 And all her shawls don't add more than twenty roubles a year to her hundred and twenty, I know that.
8 But for the two roubles I lent you before, you owe me now twenty copecks on the same reckoning in advance.
9 She walked straight up to Katerina Ivanovna and she laid thirty roubles on the table before her in silence.
10 Boots, cotton shirt-fronts--most magnificent, a uniform, they got up all in splendid style, for eleven roubles and a half.
11 She is as rich as a Jew, she can give you five thousand roubles at a time and she is not above taking a pledge for a rouble.
12 that she had complete trust in me, but still, would I not give her an I O U for one hundred and fifteen roubles, all the debt I owed her.
13 But when Raskolnikov was in the next street, he turned back, mounted the stairs to Razumihin's again and laying on the table the German article and the three roubles, went out again, still without uttering a word.
14 If you are in an intelligible condition, I've thirty-five roubles to remit to you, as Semyon Semyonovitch has received from Afanasy Ivanovitch at your mamma's request instructions to that effect, as on previous occasions.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 15 Here, an I O U for a hundred and fifteen roubles, legally attested, and due for payment, has been brought us for recovery, given by you to the widow of the assessor Zarnitsyn, nine months ago, and paid over by the widow Zarnitsyn to one Mr. Tchebarov.
16 What made it all so difficult was that Dounia received a hundred roubles in advance when she took the place as governess in their family, on condition of part of her salary being deducted every month, and so it was impossible to throw up the situation without repaying the debt.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 17 Now that everyone has heard that Dounia is to marry Pyotr Petrovitch, my credit has suddenly improved and I know that Afanasy Ivanovitch will trust me now even to seventy-five roubles on the security of my pension, so that perhaps I shall be able to send you twenty-five or even thirty roubles.
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