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THE ADVENTURES OF RODERICK RANDOM.
CHAP. I.
Of my birth and parentage.
I WAS born in the northern part of this united kind|dom, in the house of my grandfather, a gentleman of considerable fortune and influence, who had on many occasions signalized himself in behalf of his country, and was remarkable for his abilities in the law, which he exercised with great success, in the station of a judge, particularly against beggars, for whom he had a singular aversion.
My father (his youngest son) falling in love with a poor relation, who lived with the old gentleman in quality of house-keeper, espoused her privately; and I was the first fruit of that marriage. During her pregnancy, a dream discomposed my mother so much, that her husband, tired with her importunity, at last consulted a Highland seer, whose favourable interpretation he would have secured before-hand by a bribe, but found him incorruptible. She dreamed she war delivered of a tennis-ball, which the de|vil (who, to her great surprise, acted the part of a mid-wife) struck so forcibly with a racket, that is disappeared in an instant; and she was for some time inconsolable for the loss of her offspring, when all of a sudden she beheld it return with equal violence, and enter the earth, beneath