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  1. Jun 13, 2018 · A poem by N.A. Nekrasov, "Do sumerek (Before Twilight)" describes a peasant beating a disabled horse on its "weeping, gentle eyes." As a sixteen-year-old boy, Dostoevsky witnessed something similar, as described in this semi-fictional scene:

  2. The peasant is representative of Raskolnikov's cruel egoism and intellectualism. Notice his rationale for brutally beating the horse was that it was useless and that it's his horse, and therefore he can do as he pleases with it.

  3. His philosophy about guilt is also strikingly similar, Is there any connection between the two? One example include the Dream of Raskolnikov's about the weak-trembling-horse getting beaten in the market as the horse cannot pull the heavy cart. Where young Raskolnikov tries to save the horse. In Nietzsche's life :

  4. In the following essay Woolcott eulogizes Bernhardt and remembers his last encounters with her.

  5. Jul 21, 2015 · So it has been speculated that the rise of the use of this drug in the 1970s in horse racing may have seen the expression transition from “piss like a horse” to “piss like a racehorse” – the latter expelling drastically more urine directly before races when on furosemide than their non-doped up brethren.

  6. Bernhardt on the London Stage. Chekhov's Response to Bernhardt. Two-a-Day Redemptions and Truncated Camilles: the Vaudeville Repertoire of Sarah Bernhardt. The Context: Literary, Theatrical ...

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  8. Nicolaas Thomas Bernhard (German: [ˈtoːmas ˈbɛʁnhaʁt]; 9 February 1931 – 12 February 1989) was an Austrian novelist, playwright, poet and polemicist who is considered one of the most important German-language authors of the postwar era.

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