[Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky]@TWC D-Link book
Crime and Punishment

CHAPTER VI
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And when I had finished, I'd pick out one from the fifth and one from the second thousand and take them again to the light and ask again, 'Change them, please,' and put the clerk into such a stew that he would not know how to get rid of me.

When I'd finished and had gone out, I'd come back, 'No, excuse me,' and ask for some explanation.
That's how I'd do it." "Foo! what terrible things you say!" said Zametov, laughing.

"But all that is only talk.

I dare say when it came to deeds you'd make a slip.
I believe that even a practised, desperate man cannot always reckon on himself, much less you and I.To take an example near home--that old woman murdered in our district.

The murderer seems to have been a desperate fellow, he risked everything in open daylight, was saved by a miracle--but his hands shook, too.


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