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| | Books | I Will Always Love You |
 | | He goes for a walk to digest this information, which hits him very hard, as if a strong wind were carrying a load of bricks. |
 | | He felt as if he'd lost a part of himself, or the way someone might feel at the loss of a pet or a nice sports car, or a nice pet in a nice sports car. |
 | | It was the passing of an era, and what saddened him most of all was that Dolly would never get the benefit of his loving, which would have been genuine, and gentle, and blue-collar and burly. |
| books.guardian.co.uk /print/0,3858,5135312-113002,00.html (566 words) |
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