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1    1| supposing that my case is a peculiar one; no doubt many of my
2    4|    had his second birth and peculiar religious experience, and
3   12|  the fields and woods, in a peculiar sense a part of Nature themselves,
4   14|     be, I was struck by the peculiar toughness of the steel which
5   17| virgin mould itself, with a peculiar jerk, clean down to the
6   17|  and went every day, with a peculiar shriek from the locomotive,
7   18|    I am affected as if in a peculiar sense I stood in the laboratory
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