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

CHAPTER VII
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let him win his bet! Let us give him some satisfaction, too--no matter! Strength, strength is what one wants, you can get nothing without it, and strength must be won by strength--that's what they don't know," he added proudly and self-confidently and he walked with flagging footsteps from the bridge.

Pride and self-confidence grew continually stronger in him; he was becoming a different man every moment.

What was it had happened to work this revolution in him?
He did not know himself; like a man catching at a straw, he suddenly felt that he, too, 'could live, that there was still life for him, that his life had not died with the old woman.' Perhaps he was in too great a hurry with his conclusions, but he did not think of that.
"But I did ask her to remember 'Thy servant Rodion' in her prayers," the idea struck him.

"Well, that was...

in case of emergency," he added and laughed himself at his boyish sally.


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