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  IMPARA L'INGLESE CON BABYLON!
Come servizio al nostro pubblico, riportiamo qui a sinistra il box di traduzione di Babylon
. Se c'θ una parola inglese che non capisci, digitala nella casella Traduci... , clicca su GO e subito si aprirΰ una finestra con la traduzione italiana. Per una maggiore comoditΰ e completezza, puoi scaricare qui gratuitamente per un mese Babylon Pro, lo strumento in assoluto piω utile per chi vuole imparare l'inglese. Da oggi anche con il traduttore di frasi inglesi incorporato!
 
 
 


LIST OF CHAPTERS
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CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
by Fyodor Dostoevsky • Copyright note

We thank The Gutenberg Projekt for this public domain version - Complete text in one page

I nostri classici in inglese sono frammentati in modo da rendertene piω agevole lo studio. Se non capisci una parola, usa il dizionario di BABYLON  oppure traduci frasi intere con il riquadro di GOOGLE TRANSLATE. Per ascoltare il testo in perfetto inglese, utilizza invece READSPEAKER.

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He waked up late next day after a broken sleep. But his sleep had not
refreshed him; he waked up bilious, irritable, ill-tempered, and looked
with hatred at his room. It was a tiny cupboard of a room about six
paces in length. It had a poverty-stricken appearance with its dusty
yellow paper peeling off the walls, and it was so low-pitched that a man
of more than average height was ill at ease in it and felt every moment
that he would knock his head against the ceiling. The furniture was in
keeping with the room: there were three old chairs, rather rickety; a
painted table in the corner on which lay a few manuscripts and books;
the dust that lay thick upon them showed that they had been long
untouched. A big clumsy sofa occupied almost the whole of one wall and
half the floor space of the room; it was once covered with chintz, but
was now in rags and served Raskolnikov as a bed. Often he went to sleep
on it, as he was, without undressing, without sheets, wrapped in his old
student's overcoat, with his head on one little pillow, under which he
heaped up all the linen he had, clean and dirty, by way of a bolster. A
little table stood in front of the sofa.

It would have been difficult to sink to a lower ebb of disorder, but to
Raskolnikov in his present state of mind this was positively agreeable.
He had got completely away from everyone, like a tortoise in its shell,
and even the sight of a servant girl who had to wait upon him and looked
sometimes into his room made him writhe with nervous irritation. He was
in the condition that overtakes some monomaniacs entirely concentrated
upon one thing. His landlady had for the last fortnight given up sending
him in meals, and he had not yet thought of expostulating with her,
though he went without his dinner. Nastasya, the cook and only servant,
was rather pleased at the lodger's mood and had entirely given up
sweeping and doing his room, only once a week or so she would stray into
his room with a broom. She waked him up that day.

"Get up, why are you asleep?" she called to him. "It's past nine, I have
brought you some tea; will you have a cup? I should think you're fairly
starving?"

Raskolnikov opened his eyes, started and recognised Nastasya.

"From the landlady, eh?" he asked, slowly and with a sickly face sitting
up on the sofa.

"From the landlady, indeed!"

She set before him her own cracked teapot full of weak and stale tea and
laid two yellow lumps of sugar by the side of it.

"Here, Nastasya, take it please," he said, fumbling in his pocket (for
he had slept in his clothes) and taking out a handful of coppers--"run
and buy me a loaf. And get me a little sausage, the cheapest, at the
pork-butcher's."

"The loaf I'll fetch you this very minute, but wouldn't you rather have
some cabbage soup instead of sausage? It's capital soup, yesterday's. I
saved it for you yesterday, but you came in late. It's fine soup."

When the soup had been brought, and he had begun upon it, Nastasya
sat down beside him on the sofa and began chatting. She was a country

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AVAILABLE WORKS
•••••••••••••••••

  1. 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
  2. 5 Weeks in a Balloon
  3. A Christmas Carol
  4. A Journey to the Centre of the Earth
  5. A Modest Proposal
  6. A Sentimental Journey
  7. A Study in Scarlet
  8. A Tale of a Tub
  9. A Tale of Two Cities
  10. A Woman of No Importance
  11. Adam Bede
  12. Alice In Wonderland
  13. All Around The Moon
  14. An Ideal Husband
  15. Anna Karenina
  16. Around The World in 80 Days
  17. Barry Lindon
  18. Bleak House
  19. Captains Courageous
  20. Crime and Punishment
  21. Daniel Deronda
  22. David Copperfield
  23. Dead Souls
  24. Decamerone 1
  25. Decamerone 2
  26. Doll's House
  27. Dracula
  28. Emma
  29. Equiano
  30. Erewhon
  31. Eugenie Grandet
  32. Fables
  33. Fairy Tales (Andersen)
  34. Fairy Tales (Grimm)
  35. Frankenstein
  36. Gargantua and Pantagruel
  37. Ghosts
  38. Great Expectations
  39. Gulliver's Travels
  40. Hamlet
  41. Hard Times
  42. Hedda Gabler
  43. Ivanhoe
  44. Jane Eyre 
  45. Just So Stories
  46. Kim
  47. King Lear
  48. King Solomon's Mines
  49. Lady Windermere's Fan
  50. Leviathan
  51. Little Dorrit
  52. Lord Jim
  53. Manon Lescaut
  54. Mansfield Park
  55. Martin Chuzzlewit
  56. Master of Ballantrae
  57. Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
  58. Metamorphosis
  59. Michael Strogoff
  60. Middlemarch
  61. Moby Dick
  62. Moll Flanders
  63. My Ten Years Imprisonment
  64. Northanger Abbey
  65. Nostromo
  66. Oliver Twist
  67. Othello
  68. Pamela
  69. Persuasion
  70. Phaedra
  71. Pictures from Italy
  72. Pillars of Society
  73. Pinocchio
  74. Pride and Prejudice
  75. Principle of Population
  76. Rob Roy
  77. Robinson Crusoe
  78. Romeo and Juliet
  79. Rosmersholm
  80. Sense and Sensibility
  81. She Stoops to Conquer
  82. Silas Marner
  83. Sons and Lovers
  84. Swann's Way
  85. Tales from Shakespeare
  86. Tao Teh King
  87. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
  88. The Alchemist
  89. The Art of Controversy
  90. The Autobiography of Charles Darwin
  91. The Book of Household Management
  92. The Book of Nonsense
  93. The Bride of Lammermoor
  94. The Canterbury Tales
  95. The Communist Manifesto
  96. The Count of Montecristo
  97. The Fall of the House of Usher
  98. The Happy Prince and Other Tales
  99. The Hound of the Baskervilles
  100. The Importance of Being Earnest
  101. The Innocence of Father Brown
  102. The Jungle Book
  103. The Lady from the Sea
  104. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
  105. The Man in the Iron Mask
  106. The Man Who Was Thursday
  107. The Man Who Would be King
  108. The Master Builder
  109. The Mill on the Floss
  110. The Mystery of Edwin Drood
  111. The Nigger of the Narcissus
  112. The Origin of Species
  113. The Pickwick Papers
  114. The Picture of Dorian Gray
  115. The Pilgrim's Progress
  116. The Prince
  117. The Scarlet Letter
  118. The Second Jungle Book
  119. The Sign of the Four
  120. The Three Musketeers
  121. The Travels of Marco Polo
  122. The Trial
  123. The Vicar of Wakefield
  124. The Wisdom of Father Brown
  125. The Wisdom of Life
  126. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
  127. Through the Looking Glass
  128. Tom Jones
  129. Treasure Island
  130. Tristram Shandy
  131. Typhoon
  132. Vanity Fair
  133. Volpone
  134. War and Peace
  135. Waverley
  136. Wuthering Heights