Part 1, Chapter 1
"Give me four roubles anyway--I'll redeem it, it's my father's. I'll be getting money soon."
"A rouble and a half, sir, and interest paid in advance, if you like, sir."
"A rouble and a half!" the young man exclaimed.
"As you please." And the old woman held the watch out to him.
Page 8. First interaction between Raskolnikov and Alyona Ivanova. Shows her greed/lack of pity and R's desperation for money.
Part 2, Chapter 2
A strong, almost unbearable joy possessed him for a moment. "The traces are covered! And who, who would think of looking under that stone? It may have been lying there since the house was built, and may go on lying there as long again. And even if they find it, who will think of me?"
Page 116. R's innovative thinking of putting the stolen items from the murder under a large rock.
Part 3, Chapter 2
"My God!" exclaimed ____, "would I ever have thought I'd be afraid to meet my own son, my dear, dear Rodya, as I am now!...I am afraid, Dmitri Prokovich!"
Page 232. Pulcheria Alexandrovna, R's mother. He has changed so much since she last saw him.
A good university friend from the good old days!
Dmitri Prokofych Razumikhin
A) Raskolnikov dreams of the mare being beaten
B) Raskolnikov murders Alyona and Lizaveta
A) Raskolnikov dreams of the mare being beaten
Part 1, Chapter 6
"What do you think, wouldn't thousands of good deeds make up for one tyiny little crime? For one life, thousands of lives saved from decay and corruption. One death for hundreds of lives -- it's simple arithmetic!"
Page 67. Overhearing a student talk about Alyona. Gives additional justification to R's actions. Commentary on the transactional nature of life as a sum of good deeds and bad deeds.
Part 2, Chapter 5
"You see, it has been ten years since I last visited Petersburg. All these new things of ours, reforms, ideas-- all this has touched is in the provinces as well; but to see better, and to see everything, one must be in Petersberg. Well, sir, it is precisely my notion that one sees and learns most of all by observing our younger generations."
Page 156. Pyotr Petrovich and his ideas on the spreading of political ideas.
Part 3, Chapter 3
"What I'm driving at," ___ went on, with increasing relish, "is that your complete recovery now depends chiefly on you yourself. Since it's become possible to talk with you, I should like to impress upon you that it is necessary to eliminate the original, so to speak, radical causes that influenced the onset of your ill condition; only then will you be cured; otherwise it will get even worse."
Raskolnikov's Sister. Strong willed and sacrificial.
Dunya, Dounia or Dunechka
A) Raskolnikov meets Marmeladov in the tavern
B) Raskolnikov receives a letter from his mother about Dunya’s engagement
A) Raskolnikov meets Marmeladov in the tavern
Part 1, Chapter 5
Such dreams, morbid dreams, are always long remembered and produce a strong impression on the upset and already agitated organism of the person.
Page 57. Narration. Dreams as a form of omen. The worsening state of R.
Part 2, Chapter 4
"So he has an open palm, what of it! Who cares if he has an open palm!" ____ suddenly cried, getting somehow unnaturally irritated. "Did I praise his open palm? I said he was a good man, only in his own way! And if we look straight, in all ways-- will there be any good people left?"
Page 142. Razumikhin and an... interesting perspective on morality.
Part 3, Chapter 3
"Brother," ___ replied firmly and also dryly, "there is a mistake on your part in all this. I thought it over during the night and found the mistake. The point is that you seem to think I'm sacrificing myself to someone and for someone. That is not so at all. I am marrying simply for myself..."
Page 244. Her general argument for why she should marry. Highlights Dunya's stubbornness and confidence in her decision.
Marmeladov's daughter. Forced to prostitute herself.
Sonya / Sonechka
A) Raskolnikov visits the murder scene after the crime
B) Raskolnikov hides the stolen goods under a rock
B) Raskolnikov hides the stolen goods under a rock
Part 1, Chapter 2
"So then, sometime after five, I see Sonechka get up, put on her kercheif, put on her wrap, and go out, and she came back home after eight. She came in, went straight to Katerina Ivanovna, and silently laid thirty roubles on the table in front of her. Not a word with it, not even a glance..."
Page 19. Marmeladov to R. Her daughter having to turn to prostitution in order to support her family.
Part 2, Chapter 2
He opened his hand, stared at the coin, swung, and threw it into the water; then he turned and went home. It seemed to him that at that moment he had cut himself off, as with scissors, from everyone and everything.
Page 122. R giving up and throwing away the coin that a stranger gave him on the street. Was given to him in Christ's name.
Part 3, Chapter 6
"I want to live myself; otherwise it's better not to live at all. And so? I just didn't want to pass by my hungry mother, clutching my rouble in my pocket, while waiting for 'universal happiness.'"
Page 288. Roskolnikov. A form of motive/justification for his murder. He took matters into his own hands.
The simple innocent and half sister to the main target.
Lizaveta Ivanovna
A) Razumikhin offers Raskolnikov a translation job
B) Raskolnikov faints at the police station
B) Raskolnikov faints at the police station
Part 1, Chapter 3
"Do you pray to God, Rodya, as you used to, and do you believe in the goodness of our Creator and Redeemer? I feel in my heart that you have been visited by the fasionable new unbeleif. If so, I pray for you."
Page 41. R's mother in her letter. The "new unbeleif" can refer to the growing secular/atheist population in Russia.
Part 2, Chapter 7
"And what am I to do with these?" she interpretted sharply and irratably, pointing to the little ones.
"God is merciful; hope for help from the Almighty," the priest began.
"Ehh! Merciful, but not to us!"
"That is sinful, madam, sinful," the preist observed, shaking his head.
"And is this not sinful?" cried _____, pointing to the dying man.
Page 194. Katerina Ivanova, the wife of Marmeladov. Controversial statement against god.
Part 3, Chapter 5
Now then, sir... I really don't know how best to express it... it's such a playful idea... a psychological one.. Now then, sir, it really cannot be -- heh heh heh! -- that when you were writing your little article that you regarded yourself -- say, just the tiniest bit-- as one of the 'extraordinary' people, as saying a new word -- in your sense..."
"It's quite possible," Raskolnikov replied disdainfully.
Page 278. Porfiry the magistrate and Raskolnikov discussing his article about ordinary and extraordinary people. R is not making himself appear innocent...
The person Raskolnikov hallucinated(?) beating up the landlady.
Ilya Petrovich
A) Raskolnikov gives money to Katerina Ivanovna after Marmeladov’s death
B) Raskolnikov returns to the pawnbroker’s apartment after the murder
C) Raskolnikov meets Porfiry Petrovich for the first time
B) Raskolnikov returns to the pawnbroker’s apartment after the murder