1. Crime and Punishment (the novel)
If he were to make decisions based on his desire not have people get hurt or killed, his goals would most likely not be met. ... Shall I tell them or not?" ... Also, later on at Katerina's funeral, he thinks to himself that "the thought of death and the presence of death had something oppressive and mysteriously awful", but yet he was capable of murdering two women. Emotionally he may not like the presence of death, but his intellectual side was telling him to kill the women for his own theory. ... He is too proud to admit that he is afraid, so he puts on his superior attitude to fool...
- Word Count: 1812
- Approx Pages: 7