1 Razumihin was one of his old comrades at the university.
2 I told you just now I could not keep myself at the university.
3 before this, in the university, how morose he used to be, how gloomy.
4 I will make haste and return to the university: and then everything will go smoothly.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 3: CHAPTER III 5 I fancy the first stage of your derangement coincides with your leaving the university.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 3: CHAPTER III 6 Among other things he began attending university lectures again in order to take his degree.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 7 I was a student, but I couldn't keep myself at the university and was forced for a time to leave it.
8 For the present he, too, had been obliged to give up the university, but it was only for a time, and he was working with all his might to save enough to return to his studies again.
9 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.
10 It was remarkable that Raskolnikov had hardly any friends at the university; he kept aloof from everyone, went to see no one, and did not welcome anyone who came to see him, and indeed everyone soon gave him up.
11 When he was attending the university, he had hundreds of times--generally on his way home--stood still on this spot, gazed at this truly magnificent spectacle and almost always marvelled at a vague and mysterious emotion it roused in him.
12 Katerina Ivanovna was greatly delighted to see him, in the first place, because he was the one "educated visitor, and, as everyone knew, was in two years to take a professorship in the university," and secondly because he immediately and respectfully apologised for having been unable to be at the funeral.
13 In one place one hears of a student's robbing the mail on the high road; in another place people of good social position forge false banknotes; in Moscow of late a whole gang has been captured who used to forge lottery tickets, and one of the ringleaders was a lecturer in universal history; then our secretary abroad was murdered from some obscure motive of gain.
14 Razumihin somehow discovered and proved that while Raskolnikov was at the university he had helped a poor consumptive fellow student and had spent his last penny on supporting him for six months, and when this student died, leaving a decrepit old father whom he had maintained almost from his thirteenth year, Raskolnikov had got the old man into a hospital and paid for his funeral when he died.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII