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- Федор Достоевский
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- Преступление и наказание
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- Стр. 448/453
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Raskolnikov
had
been
very
dreamy
for
a
few
days
before
.
He
asked
a
great
deal
about
his
mother
and
was
constantly
anxious
about
her
.
He
worried
so
much
about
her
that
it
alarmed
Dounia
.
When
he
heard
about
his
mother
’
s
illness
he
became
very
gloomy
.
With
Sonia
he
was
particularly
reserved
all
the
time
.
With
the
help
of
the
money
left
to
her
by
Svidrigaïlov
,
Sonia
had
long
ago
made
her
preparations
to
follow
the
party
of
convicts
in
which
he
was
despatched
to
Siberia
.
Not
a
word
passed
between
Raskolnikov
and
her
on
the
subject
,
but
both
knew
it
would
be
so
.
At
the
final
leave
-
taking
he
smiled
strangely
at
his
sister
’
s
and
Razumihin
’
s
fervent
anticipations
of
their
happy
future
together
when
he
should
come
out
of
prison
.
He
predicted
that
their
mother
’
s
illness
would
soon
have
a
fatal
ending
.
Sonia
and
he
at
last
set
off
.
Two
months
later
Dounia
was
married
to
Razumihin
.
It
was
a
quiet
and
sorrowful
wedding
;
Porfiry
Petrovitch
and
Zossimov
were
invited
however
.
During
all
this
period
Razumihin
wore
an
air
of
resolute
determination
.
Dounia
put
implicit
faith
in
his
carrying
out
his
plans
and
indeed
she
could
not
but
believe
in
him
.
He
displayed
a
rare
strength
of
will
.
Among
other
things
he
began
attending
university
lectures
again
in
order
to
take
his
degree
.
They
were
continually
making
plans
for
the
future
;
both
counted
on
settling
in
Siberia
within
five
years
at
least
.
Till
then
they
rested
their
hopes
on
Sonia
.
Pulcheria
Alexandrovna
was
delighted
to
give
her
blessing
to
Dounia
’
s
marriage
with
Razumihin
;
but
after
the
marriage
she
became
even
more
melancholy
and
anxious
.
To
give
her
pleasure
Razumihin
told
her
how
Raskolnikov
had
looked
after
the
poor
student
and
his
decrepit
father
and
how
a
year
ago
he
had
been
burnt
and
injured
in
rescuing
two
little
children
from
a
fire
.
These
two
pieces
of
news
excited
Pulcheria
Alexandrovna
’
s
disordered
imagination
almost
to
ecstasy
.
She
was
continually
talking
about
them
,
even
entering
into
conversation
with
strangers
in
the
street
,
though
Dounia
always
accompanied
her
.
In
public
conveyances
and
shops
,
wherever
she
could
capture
a
listener
,
she
would
begin
the
discourse
about
her
son
,
his
article
,
how
he
had
helped
the
student
,
how
he
had
been
burnt
at
the
fire
,
and
so
on
!
Dounia
did
not
know
how
to
restrain
her
.
Apart
from
the
danger
of
her
morbid
excitement
,
there
was
the
risk
of
someone
’
s
recalling
Raskolnikov
’
s
name
and
speaking
of
the
recent
trial
.
Pulcheria
Alexandrovna
found
out
the
address
of
the
mother
of
the
two
children
her
son
had
saved
and
insisted
on
going
to
see
her
.
At
last
her
restlessness
reached
an
extreme
point
.
She
would
sometimes
begin
to
cry
suddenly
and
was
often
ill
and
feverishly
delirious
.
One
morning
she
declared
that
by
her
reckoning
Rodya
ought
soon
to
be
home
,
that
she
remembered
when
he
said
good
-
bye
to
her
he
said
that
they
must
expect
him
back
in
nine
months
.
She
began
to
prepare
for
his
coming
,
began
to
do
up
her
room
for
him
,
to
clean
the
furniture
,
to
wash
and
put
up
new
hangings
and
so
on
.
Dounia
was
anxious
,
but
said
nothing
and
helped
her
to
arrange
the
room
.
After
a
fatiguing
day
spent
in
continual
fancies
,
in
joyful
day
-
dreams
and
tears
,
Pulcheria
Alexandrovna
was
taken
ill
in
the
night
and
by
morning
she
was
feverish
and
delirious
.
It
was
brain
fever
.
She
died
within
a
fortnight
.
In
her
delirium
she
dropped
words
which
showed
that
she
knew
a
great
deal
more
about
her
son
’
s
terrible
fate
than
they
had
supposed
.
For
a
long
time
Raskolnikov
did
not
know
of
his
mother
’
s
death
,
though
a
regular
correspondence
had
been
maintained
from
the
time
he
reached
Siberia
.
It
was
carried
on
by
means
of
Sonia
,
who
wrote
every
month
to
the
Razumihins
and
received
an
answer
with
unfailing
regularity
.
At
first
they
found
Sonia
’
s
letters
dry
and
unsatisfactory
,
but
later
on
they
came
to
the
conclusion
that
the
letters
could
not
be
better
,
for
from
these
letters
they
received
a
complete
picture
of
their
unfortunate
brother
’
s
life
.
Sonia
’
s
letters
were
full
of
the
most
matter
-
of
-
fact
detail
,
the
simplest
and
clearest
description
of
all
Raskolnikov
’
s
surroundings
as
a
convict
.
There
was
no
word
of
her
own
hopes
,
no
conjecture
as
to
the
future
,
no
description
of
her
feelings
.
Instead
of
any
attempt
to
interpret
his
state
of
mind
and
inner
life
,
she
gave
the
simple
facts
—
that
is
,
his
own
words
,
an
exact
account
of
his
health
,
what
he
asked
for
at
their
interviews
,
what
commission
he
gave
her
and
so
on
.
All
these
facts
she
gave
with
extraordinary
minuteness
.
The
picture
of
their
unhappy
brother
stood
out
at
last
with
great
clearness
and
precision
.
There
could
be
no
mistake
,
because
nothing
was
given
but
facts
.
But
Dounia
and
her
husband
could
get
little
comfort
out
of
the
news
,
especially
at
first
.
Sonia
wrote
that
he
was
constantly
sullen
and
not
ready
to
talk
,
that
he
scarcely
seemed
interested
in
the
news
she
gave
him
from
their
letters
,
that
he
sometimes
asked
after
his
mother
and
that
when
,
seeing
that
he
had
guessed
the
truth
,
she
told
him
at
last
of
her
death
,
she
was
surprised
to
find
that
he
did
not
seem
greatly
affected
by
it
,
not
externally
at
any
rate
.
She
told
them
that
,
although
he
seemed
so
wrapped
up
in
himself
and
,
as
it
were
,
shut
himself
off
from
everyone
—
he
took
a
very
direct
and
simple
view
of
his
new
life
;
that
he
understood
his
position
,
expected
nothing
better
for
the
time
,
had
no
ill
-
founded
hopes
(
as
is
so
common
in
his
position
)
and
scarcely
seemed
surprised
at
anything
in
his
surroundings
,
so
unlike
anything
he
had
known
before
.
She
wrote
that
his
health
was
satisfactory
;
he
did
his
work
without
shirking
or
seeking
to
do
more
;
he
was
almost
indifferent
about
food
,
but
except
on
Sundays
and
holidays
the
food
was
so
bad
that
at
last
he
had
been
glad
to
accept
some
money
from
her
,
Sonia
,
to
have
his
own
tea
every
day
.
He
begged
her
not
to
trouble
about
anything
else
,
declaring
that
all
this
fuss
about
him
only
annoyed
him
.
Sonia
wrote
further
that
in
prison
he
shared
the
same
room
with
the
rest
,
that
she
had
not
seen
the
inside
of
their
barracks
,
but
concluded
that
they
were
crowded
,
miserable
and
unhealthy
;
that
he
slept
on
a
plank
bed
with
a
rug
under
him
and
was
unwilling
to
make
any
other
arrangement
.
But
that
he
lived
so
poorly
and
roughly
,
not
from
any
plan
or
design
,
but
simply
from
inattention
and
indifference
.