The Surprising Adventures of Bampfylde Moore Carew, King of the Beggars

Bampfylde Moore Carew (1693 - 1759) and Robert Goadby (1721 - 1778)

The Surprising Adventures of Bampfylde Moore Carew recounts the wide-ranging exploits of a real-life rogue – a wily professional mendicant who roams 18th-century England extracting charity from merchants, clergyman, and members of the landed gentry alike, employing in his craft an ingenious variety of deceptions and disguises put on for the purpose. Often he impersonates a shipwreck-surviving seaman and uses his wide knowledge of foreign parts and personages to achieve plausibility. Or he might appear on a doorstep as a destitute woman in widow's weeds, toting borrowed babes to enhance the effect.

In the course of his psychological experiments in the science of inducing charity, Bampfylde Moore Carew takes great delight in touching the same mark more than once, back to back, offering up a different identity each time he scores. Sometimes, after the fact, he unmasks to his prey, and a drinking-party ensues. Twice, though, he is apprehended and transported to colonial America to be sold into slavery. During his first American sojourn, he lives among peaceful Indians before wangling his way back to England, feigning smallpox en route to avoid being pressed into military service. On another occasion, though, he is press-ganged onto a warship bound up the Baltic but, as always, uses his wits to make his way back to his beloved wife and daughter in England.

This book opens a panoramic window onto the day-to-day problems and social practices of those attempting to survive the precarious first half of the 18th century. Appended to the tale is A Dictionary of the Cant Language, listing the colorful, semi-secret argot used by mendicants to, among other things, describe targets of opportunity while evading comprehension by overhearing ears. A sort of urban dictionary of its day, it includes such surprising entries as "flaybottomist - a schoolmaster," "lousetrap - a comb" and "tip the velvet - to tongue a woman." (Grant Hurlock)

Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction, Culture & Heritage Fiction, Travel Fiction

Language: English

Section Chapter Reader Time
Play 01 Chapter 1 Grant Hurlock
00:17:31
Play 02 Chapter 2 Grant Hurlock
00:16:02
Play 03 Chapter 3 Grant Hurlock
00:12:50
Play 04 Chapter 4 Grant Hurlock
00:12:57
Play 05 Chapter 5 Grant Hurlock
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Play 06 Chapter 6 Grant Hurlock
00:14:13
Play 07 Chapter 7 Grant Hurlock
00:18:48
Play 08 Chapter 8 Grant Hurlock
00:10:40
Play 09 Chapter 9 Grant Hurlock
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Play 10 Chapter 10 Grant Hurlock
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Play 11 Chapter 11 Grant Hurlock
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Play 12 Chapter 12 Grant Hurlock
00:26:05
Play 13 Chapter 13 Grant Hurlock
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Play 14 Chapter 14 Grant Hurlock
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Play 15 Chapter 15 Grant Hurlock
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Play 16 Chapter 16 Grant Hurlock
00:19:57
Play 17 Chapter 17 Grant Hurlock
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Play 18 Chapter 18 Grant Hurlock
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Play 19 Chapter 19 Grant Hurlock
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Play 20 Chapter 20 Grant Hurlock
00:24:05
Play 21 Chapter 21 Grant Hurlock
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Play 22 Chapter 22 Grant Hurlock
00:32:18
Play 23 Chapter 23 - A Dictionary of the Cant Language Grant Hurlock
00:30:12