Rake


 
 
Rake

:For the agricultural implement, see rake (tool). For other uses, see rake (disambiguation).

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A rake is a stock character, a man who wastes his (usually inherited) fortune on "wine, women, and song," incurring lavish debts in the process. The rake is also frequently a cad: a man who seduces a young woman and impregnates her before leaving, often to her social or financial ruin. To call the character a rake calls attention to his promiscuity and wild spending of money; to call the character a cad implies a callous seducer who coldly breaks his victim's heart.

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During the Restoration period 1660-1700, the word was used in a glamorous sense: the Restoration rake is a carefree, witty, sexually irresistible aristocrat typified by Charles II's courtiers the Earl of Rochester and the Earl of Dorset, who combined riotous living with intellectual pursuits and patronage of the arts. The Restoration rake is celebrated in the Restoration comedy of the 1660s and 1670s. After the reign of Charles II, and especially after the Glorious Revolution of 1688, the cultural perception of the rake took a dive into squalor. The rake became the butt of moralistic tales in which his typical fate was debtor's prison, venereal disease, or, in the case of William Hogarth's A Rake's Progress, insanity in Bedlam.

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The rake is often portrayed as a heavy drinker or gambler. An earlier form of the word was rake-hell, a form reshaped by folk etymology to mean someone who stokes the fires of Hell, making them hotter. The actual etymology of the word is from the Old Norse reikall, meaning "vagrant" or "wanderer;" this was borrowed into Middle English as rakel.

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Well known fictional rakes and cads include:

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~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
See also
 


 

~ Related Subjects ~

Stereotype (1) - Dandy (1) - Old English (1) - German (1) - Dutch (1) - Fop (1) - Old Norse (1) - Etymology (1) - Middle English (1) - Alcoholic (1) - Town drunk (1) - Agricultural (1) - Fictional character (1) - Harrow (1) - Stereotypes (1) -
 

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