1 Katerina Ivanovna stood, turning white and gasping for breath.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 2 Zametov looked wildly at him and turned white as the tablecloth.
3 "Pyotr Petrovitch, go away," she turned to him, white with anger.
4 She went downstairs and returned with a white earthenware jug of water.
5 Raskolnikov lay with a white face and twitching upper lip, breathing painfully.
6 She was wearing a dress of thin dark stuff and she had a white transparent scarf round her neck.
7 They were papering the walls with a new white paper covered with lilac flowers, instead of the old, dirty, yellow one.
8 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 9 Her light blue dress trimmed with white lace floated about the table like an air-balloon and filled almost half the room.
10 I shall have to pull a long face with him too," he thought, with a beating heart, and he turned white, "and do it naturally, too.
11 "No," said he, "I had not heard," and all the while he was listening, his eyes were staring out of his head and he turned as white as chalk.
12 Raskolnikov, white as a handkerchief, had answered sharply, jerkily, without dropping his black feverish eyes before Ilya Petrovitch's stare.
13 It would have been good-natured except for a look in the eyes, which shone with a watery, mawkish light under almost white, blinking eyelashes.
14 On these occasions they used to take on a white dish tied up in a table napkin a special sort of rice pudding with raisins stuck in it in the shape of a cross.
15 At the top, under a white sheet, was a coat of red brocade lined with hareskin; under it was a silk dress, then a shawl and it seemed as though there was nothing below but clothes.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 16 Raskolnikov turned to the wall where in the dirty, yellow paper he picked out one clumsy, white flower with brown lines on it and began examining how many petals there were in it, how many scallops in the petals and how many lines on them.
17 Putting the iron which was a little the smaller on the piece of wood, he fastened them very firmly, crossing and re-crossing the thread round them; then wrapped them carefully and daintily in clean white paper and tied up the parcel so that it would be very difficult to untie it.
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