THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF BAMPFYLDE-MOORE CAREW, Commonly called the King of the Beggars: Being An Impartial Account of his life, from leaving Tiverton School at the Age of Fifteen, and entering into a Society of Gipsies. and a Dictionary of the Cant Language, used by the Mendicants.
Carew (Bampfylde-Moore)

Published by J. Buckland, C Bathurst, T Davies,London, 1793. Rebound fortified binding in leather  part original? ; later gilt abbreviated title on spine; original text intact with heavy foxing still intact; with "Dictionary of Cant Terms" at rear.  
" Bampfylde Moore Carew /ˈbæmˌfiːld, kəˈruː/ (1690-1758) was an English rogue, vagabond and impostor, who claimed to be King of the Beggars.The Life and Adventures of Bampfylde Moore Carew was first published in 1745. Although it states that the contents were "noted by himself during his passage to America" and it is likely that facts were supplied by Carew, the author was probably Robert Goadby, a printer in Sherborne, Dorset, who published an early edition in 1749. It has been suggested that Carew dictated his memoirs to Mrs Goadby.

The Life continued to be a best seller throughout the next hundred years in numerous editions as books and chapbooks. He became a nationally known character, appealing to a provincial audience. One edition of the Life was printed in Hull in 1785.

How much of the Life is true is impossible now to know. Carew certainly travelled and is likely to have indulged in minor crimes, but many stories seem too fantastic or literary to be true. It appealed to the market for mild 'rogue' literature and many editions included a canting dictionary. The public found the Life appealing: an educated man from a good family who spent his life ingeniously and audaciously outwitting the establishment, including people who should have recognised him, and without ever doing anything really bad....

Carew claims to have taken to the road after he ran away from Blundell's School in Tiverton. With friends, he chased a deer through fields causing damage, which caused farmers to complain to the headmaster. Carew ran away and, at an alehouse, fell in with a band of “gypsies”. (These were almost certainly not Romany but vagabonds living off their wits.) Carew travelled widely, at first around Devon and then around England, supporting himself by playing confidence tricks on the wealthy."