posted by
lauraredcloud at 04:30pm on 26/10/2008 under crime and punishment, fyodor dostoevsky, recaps
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2.5
So this portly stately guy walks in on Raskolnikov lying there "undressed, disheveled, unwashed" (I thought Razumikhin just dressed him?) and "the improper, untidy figure and unshaven face of Razumikhin" sitting nearby, and looks on with undisguised disgust. He introduces himself as Peter Petrovich Luzhin, Dunia's betrothed. Oh, boy! He's put out that Raskolnikov does not seem to have been expecting him. It's unclear which makes him more uncomfortable: Raskolnikov's curt responses or Razumikhin's clumsy attempts at hospitality. ( Awwwwkward. )
2.6
Left alone, Raskolnikov immediately dressed, puts his money in his pocket, and goes out. Wow! Night's falling, and he wanders out to a shady part of town where there's a lot of whores and bars, and everyone seems to be having fun. He has a moment of love of life. He thinks of something he read once where a condemned man would prefer to live in a square yard of space all his the rest of his days than to die. "Only to live, to live and live! Life, whatever it may be! How true it is! Good God, how true! Man is a vile creature! And vile is he who calls man vile for that." Raskolnikov is weird. ( And he only gets weirder. )
Bank: 25 rubles + 45 kopeks I forgot to mention yesterday (change from Razumikhin's purchases)- 15 kopeks to buy a hooker a drink - 50 kopeks for tea, paper, and vodka = 24 rubles 90 kopeks
Raskolnikov Like-O-Meter: 4. Shut up, Raskolnikov.
Razumikhin Like-O-Meter: 74. He loves Raskolnikov, AND he stood up to him!
So this portly stately guy walks in on Raskolnikov lying there "undressed, disheveled, unwashed" (I thought Razumikhin just dressed him?) and "the improper, untidy figure and unshaven face of Razumikhin" sitting nearby, and looks on with undisguised disgust. He introduces himself as Peter Petrovich Luzhin, Dunia's betrothed. Oh, boy! He's put out that Raskolnikov does not seem to have been expecting him. It's unclear which makes him more uncomfortable: Raskolnikov's curt responses or Razumikhin's clumsy attempts at hospitality. ( Awwwwkward. )
2.6
Left alone, Raskolnikov immediately dressed, puts his money in his pocket, and goes out. Wow! Night's falling, and he wanders out to a shady part of town where there's a lot of whores and bars, and everyone seems to be having fun. He has a moment of love of life. He thinks of something he read once where a condemned man would prefer to live in a square yard of space all his the rest of his days than to die. "Only to live, to live and live! Life, whatever it may be! How true it is! Good God, how true! Man is a vile creature! And vile is he who calls man vile for that." Raskolnikov is weird. ( And he only gets weirder. )
Bank: 25 rubles + 45 kopeks I forgot to mention yesterday (change from Razumikhin's purchases)- 15 kopeks to buy a hooker a drink - 50 kopeks for tea, paper, and vodka = 24 rubles 90 kopeks
Raskolnikov Like-O-Meter: 4. Shut up, Raskolnikov.
Razumikhin Like-O-Meter: 74. He loves Raskolnikov, AND he stood up to him!