Boris Tikhomirov, Dostoevsky scholar affiliated with the Dostoevsky Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia, recently added further evidence to my four-decades-old theory that Raskolnikov confesses precisely on Elijah's Day, July 20th (Old Style), after wandering around Petersburg all night, hammered by the proverbial Elijah's Day storm. In his recent commentary on Crime and Punishment, Tikhomirov notes that on the first day of the novel's action Marmeladov tells Raskolnikov that he received his pay six days previously. Tikhomirov points out that government workers received their pay on the first of the month. Thus, the first day of action is July 6th. Fourteen days subsequently pass before Raskolnikov confesses - on July 20th, Elijah's Day, as I argued in 1981, 1986, 1992 and in several more recent publications. Tikhomirov for some reason is unaware of my research and does not cite any of my work. See Tikhomirov's book: Lazar', griadi von!  (2017).