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Rake (stock character)

In a historical context, a rake (short for rakehell, analogous to "hellraiser") was a man who was habituated to immoral conduct, particularly womanizing. Often, a rake was also prodigal, wasting his (usually inherited) fortune on gambling, wine, women, and song, and incurring lavish debts in the process. Cad is a closely related term. Comparable terms are "libertine" and "debauchee".

The Tavern Scene from A Rake's Progress by William Hogarth

The Restoration rake was a carefree, witty, sexually irresistible aristocrat whose heyday was during the English Restoration period (1660–1688) at the court of King Charles II. They were typified by the "Merry Gang" of courtiers, who included as prominent members John Wilmot, George Villiers, and Charles Sackville, who combined riotous living with intellectual pursuits and patronage of the arts. At this time the rake featured as a stock character in Restoration comedy.[1][2][3]

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 debtors' prison, venereal disease, or, in the case of William Hogarth's A Rake's Progress, insanity in Bedlam.[4]

In history edit

 
John Wilmot, the most infamous of the Restoration rakes

The defining period of the rake was at the court of Charles II in the late seventeenth century. Dubbed the "Merry Gang" by poet Andrew Marvell, their members included King Charles himself, George Villiers, John Wilmot, Charles Sedley, Charles Sackville, and playwrights William Wycherley and George Etherege.[5] Following the tone set by the monarch himself, these men distinguished themselves in drinking, womanizing, and witty conversation, with Wilmot, the Earl of Rochester, outdoing all the rest. Many of them were inveterate gamblers and brawlers. Some were also duelists, but not with the approval of King Charles, who discouraged the practice of dueling. Highlights of their careers include Sedley and Sackville preaching naked to a crowd from an alehouse balcony in Covent Garden, as they simulated sex with each other, and the lowlight was Buckingham's killing of Francis Talbot in a duel for the latter's wife.[6] In 1682 Thomas Wharton broke into a church at night and relieved himself against the communion table and in the pulpit.[7]

A later group of aristocratic rakes were associated with the Hellfire Club in the eighteenth century. These included Francis Dashwood and John Wilkes.[8]

Other rakes include Francis Charteris, Alessandro Cagliostro, Lord Byron, Jimi Arundell, John Mytton, Giacomo Casanova, Charles Mohun, the Marquis de Sade, Robert Fielding, and Beauchamp Bagenal.

In restoration comedy edit

On the whole, rakes may be subdivided into the penitent and persistent ones, the first being reformed by the heroine, the latter pursuing their immoral conduct.[9] Libertinistic attitudes, such as (sexual) licentiousness, alcoholism, vagrancy, cheating and gambling, can be discerned in characters belonging to the satiric norm as well as to the satiric scene. However, only the degree of wit brings the rakish gentleman, the Truewit, closer to the satiric norm, whereas Falsewits are always exploded in the satiric scene. The motivation of a rake to change his libertine ways is either hypocritical (falsewits) or honest (truewits). In other words, penitent rakes among the falsewits only abandon their way of life for financial reasons, while penitent truewits ever so often succumb to the charms of the witty heroine and, at least, go through the motions of vowing constancy.

Another typology distinguishes between the "polite rake" and the "debauch", using criteria of social class and style. In this case, the young, witty, and well-bred male character, who dominates the drawing rooms, is in sharp contrast to a contemptible debauch, who indulges in fornication, alcoholism, and hypocrisy.[10]

Still other assessments of the libertine concentrate on the kind and intensity of libertine demeanor. Here, the rake falls into any one of three categories: extravagant libertine, vicious libertine, and philosophical libertine.

The extravagant rake is characterized by anti-normative conduct throughout, even though he finally settles down in matrimony. Between 1663 and 1668, examples are Wellbred in James Howard's The English Mounsieur (1663/64), Philidor in James Howard's All Mistaken (1665/1672), and Celadon in Dryden's Secret Love (1667). In the 1690s, Sir Harry Wildair in George Farquhar's The Constant Couple (1699) represents this kind of gentlemanly rake. The extravagant rake is as promiscuous and impulsive as he is wild and frivolous, and he finally finds his match in an equally extravagant and witty heroine.[11] He is, above all, a self-aware character who "is what he wants to be", who delights in those qualities "with which he is endowed", and who provides "carnival release".[12] Thus, the extravagant rake is a comic figure because his actions are exaggerated. But he is never a comic fool.

The vicious rake is invariably presented as a despicable, if wealthy person, who thrives on scheming and intrigue. He is frequently married and abuses his wife (examples are Pinchwife in The Country Wife or Sir John Brute in John Vanbrugh's The Provok'd Wife).

Finally, the philosophical rake, the most attractive libertine figure, is characterized by self-control and refined behavior as well as by a capacity for manipulating others. His pronounced libertine leanings are not supposed to contribute anything to the comic development of the plot. Rather, his libertinism is serious, thus reflecting the philosophical principles of the pleasure-seeking, cynical Court Wits. It is this kind of libertinism that has secured the notoriety of, say, William Wycherley's The Country Wife, George Etherege's The Man of Mode, and Sir Charles Sedley's Bellamira: or, The Mistress.[13] Not only characters like Horner and Dorimant spring to mind but also Rodophil and Palamede in Dryden's Marriage-a-la-Mode, Longvil and Bruce in Thomas Shadwell's The Virtuoso and the eponymous heroine in Sedley's Bellamira.[14] These plays are not representative of the average Restoration comedy, however. The reform of the ordinary rakish gentleman is the common pattern for the ending of the play. Similarly, extravagant rakes enter into marriage. However, as soon as the persistence of the rakes remains almost unquestioned, it is difficult to decide whether libertines, no matter of what "colour", play a major part in their authors' satiric strategies. Although Etherege's Dorimant is "tamed" by Harriet, his conversion at the end is rather doubtful. Similarly, Wycherley's Horner is not punished satirically.

The libertine philosophy that the scintillating persistent rakes display seems to rebel against the narrow-mindedness and hypocrisy lurking behind the facade of Puritan honesty and bourgeois moral standards. It has been pointed out that the views of the philosophical libertine were strongly influenced by the philosophy of Thomas Hobbes.[15] But then, Hobbes was not necessarily an unquestioned ideal among the court élite, and Hobbesian ideas certainly did not permeate many comedies. John Dryden, for one, drew on Hobbesian ideas in his tragedies but these ideas are internalised by villains only.[16]

In his pursuit of pleasure and sensual satisfaction, the philosophical libertine shows hedonistic, Epicurean, and anti-rationalist patterns of thought. In their ideal of life, the libertines of this order may almost be compared to the genius of a somewhat later time: like the genius, the libertine rake is anti-authoritarian, anti-normative, and anti-traditional.

It is, above all, the emotional distance from the objects of his desire as well as from the havoc he creates, which renders the persistent rake so frightening. Criticism of the libertine was heard not only in the 1670s when sex comedies were en vogue but also earlier, whenever the male partner of the gay couple was blamed for having indulged in immoral behaviour. One major counter-argument was the call for poetic justice. Shadwell and Dryden, for example, discussed the necessity of poetic justice to punish dissoluteness in their plays.[17] To reintroduce moral standards, the rake, they demanded, had to be reformed towards the end of the play. If a persistent rake was allowed to propagate his philosophical libertinism, "poetische Ungerechtigkeit" ("poetic injustice") was likely to threaten the norm. Shadwell's Epsom Wells may be regarded as a chief instigator of an excessive libertinism which is not questioned. The play, significantly, ends with a divorce rather than the standard device of a marriage.

However, the number of persistent rakes continued to grow, together with an upsurge in cuckolding action, and, between 1672 and 1687, not all persistent rakes are punished satirically.[18] Only towards the end of the century did the increasing criticism of dramatic immorality and obscenity make the authors return to more traditional moral standards. In 1688, Shadwell's Squire of Alsatia initiated the return to a Horatian prodesse in comedy, which had already been put forth in the Preface to The Humorist (1671): "My design was it, to reprehend some of the Vices and Follies of the Age, which I take to be the most proper, and most useful way of writing Comedy" (The Complete Works of Thomas Shadwell, ed. Montague Summers, Vol. I, p. 183).

As a consequence, future emphasis was no longer on libertine adventures but on the conversion and domestication of the dashing young men. Thomas d'Urfey's Love for Money (1691) and Colley Cibber's Love's Last Shift (1696) are moralizing plays and pave the way for the sentimental comedy of the early eighteenth century.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Harold Weber, The restoration rake-hero : transformations in sexual understanding in seventeenth-century England (Univ. Wisc., 1986; ISBN 0-299-10690-X).
  2. ^ See generally, Jean Gagen, "Congreve's Mirabell and the Ideal of the Gentleman", in PMLA, Vol. 79, No. 4 (Sep. 1964), pp. 422–427.
  3. ^ David Haldane Lawrence (2007) "Sowing Wild Oats: The Fallen Man in Late-Victorian Society Melodrama", Literature Compass vol. 4 no. 3, pp. 888–898 (2007).
  4. ^ John Harold Wilson, A Rake and His Times (New York: Farrar, Straus, and Young, 1954).
  5. ^ Fergus Linnane (2006) The Lives of the English Rakes. London, Portrait: 19–20
  6. ^ Graham Parry (1986) "Minds and Manners 1660–1688" in Stuart England edited by Blair Worden. London, Guild Publishing: 176–8
  7. ^ Kenyon, J.P. The Stuarts Fontana Edition 1966 p.188
  8. ^ Fergus Linnane (2006) The Lives of the English Rakes. London, Portrait: 113–166
  9. ^ David S. Berkeley, "The Penitent Rake in Restoration Comedy", Modern Philology, 49 (1952), pp. 223–33
  10. ^ C. D. Cecil, "Libertine and Précieux Elements in Restoration Comedy", Essays in Criticism, 9 (1959), pp 242–44; Robert D. Hume "The Myth of the Rake in 'Restoration Comedy", Studies in the Literary Imagination, 10 (1977), p. 38.
  11. ^ Robert Jordan, "The Extravagant Rake in Restoration Comedy," Restoration Literature: Critical Approaches, ed. Harold Love (London, 1972), pp. 69–90
  12. ^ Jordan, "Extravagant Rake," p. 76, pp. 87–88.
  13. ^ For the special case of Bellamira, see Sir Charles Sedley's "The Mulberry-Garden (1668) and "Bellamira: or, The Mistress" (1687), ed. Holger Hanowell, p. lxxxvii ff.; the article on the rake is an excerpt from Hanowell's edition, with permission by the editor.
  14. ^ Hume, "Myth of the Rake,", pp. 42–44.
  15. ^ Harold Weber, The Restoration Rake-Hero, pp. 52, 91–97. Warren Chernaik, Sexual Freedom in Restoration Literature (Cambridge, 1995), pp. 22–51.
  16. ^ Samuel I. Mintz, The Hunting of Leviathan: Seventeenth-Century Reactions to the Materialism and Moral Philosophy of Thomas Hobbes (Cambridge, 1962); Louis Teeter, "The Dramatic Uses of Hobbes' Political Ideas," ELH, 3 (1936), pp. 140–69.
  17. ^ Wolfgang Zach, Poetic Justice: Theorie und Geschichte einer literarischen Doktrin (Tübingen, 1986), pp. 115–22.
  18. ^ Zach, Poetic Justice, p. 127; Hume, "Myth of the Rake," pp. 52, 55

Further reading edit

  • E. Beresford Chancellor (1925) The Lives of the Rakes (6 vols). Philip Allen.
  • Fergus Linnane (2006) The Lives of the English Rakes. London, Portrait.
  • D. Squibb (2011) The Art of Being a Rake in 21st Century Britain

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of rake at Wiktionary

rake, stock, character, roué, redirects, here, sauce, roux, historical, context, rake, short, rakehell, analogous, hellraiser, habituated, immoral, conduct, particularly, womanizing, often, rake, also, prodigal, wasting, usually, inherited, fortune, gambling, . Roue redirects here For sauce see roux In a historical context a rake short for rakehell analogous to hellraiser was a man who was habituated to immoral conduct particularly womanizing Often a rake was also prodigal wasting his usually inherited fortune on gambling wine women and song and incurring lavish debts in the process Cad is a closely related term Comparable terms are libertine and debauchee The Tavern Scene from A Rake s Progress by William HogarthThe Restoration rake was a carefree witty sexually irresistible aristocrat whose heyday was during the English Restoration period 1660 1688 at the court of King Charles II They were typified by the Merry Gang of courtiers who included as prominent members John Wilmot George Villiers and Charles Sackville who combined riotous living with intellectual pursuits and patronage of the arts At this time the rake featured as a stock character in Restoration comedy 1 2 3 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 debtors prison venereal disease or in the case of William Hogarth s A Rake s Progress insanity in Bedlam 4 Contents 1 In history 2 In restoration comedy 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksIn history edit nbsp John Wilmot the most infamous of the Restoration rakesThe defining period of the rake was at the court of Charles II in the late seventeenth century Dubbed the Merry Gang by poet Andrew Marvell their members included King Charles himself George Villiers John Wilmot Charles Sedley Charles Sackville and playwrights William Wycherley and George Etherege 5 Following the tone set by the monarch himself these men distinguished themselves in drinking womanizing and witty conversation with Wilmot the Earl of Rochester outdoing all the rest Many of them were inveterate gamblers and brawlers Some were also duelists but not with the approval of King Charles who discouraged the practice of dueling Highlights of their careers include Sedley and Sackville preaching naked to a crowd from an alehouse balcony in Covent Garden as they simulated sex with each other and the lowlight was Buckingham s killing of Francis Talbot in a duel for the latter s wife 6 In 1682 Thomas Wharton broke into a church at night and relieved himself against the communion table and in the pulpit 7 A later group of aristocratic rakes were associated with the Hellfire Club in the eighteenth century These included Francis Dashwood and John Wilkes 8 Other rakes include Francis Charteris Alessandro Cagliostro Lord Byron Jimi Arundell John Mytton Giacomo Casanova Charles Mohun the Marquis de Sade Robert Fielding and Beauchamp Bagenal In restoration comedy editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rake stock character news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message On the whole rakes may be subdivided into the penitent and persistent ones the first being reformed by the heroine the latter pursuing their immoral conduct 9 Libertinistic attitudes such as sexual licentiousness alcoholism vagrancy cheating and gambling can be discerned in characters belonging to the satiric norm as well as to the satiric scene However only the degree of wit brings the rakish gentleman the Truewit closer to the satiric norm whereas Falsewits are always exploded in the satiric scene The motivation of a rake to change his libertine ways is either hypocritical falsewits or honest truewits In other words penitent rakes among the falsewits only abandon their way of life for financial reasons while penitent truewits ever so often succumb to the charms of the witty heroine and at least go through the motions of vowing constancy Another typology distinguishes between the polite rake and the debauch using criteria of social class and style In this case the young witty and well bred male character who dominates the drawing rooms is in sharp contrast to a contemptible debauch who indulges in fornication alcoholism and hypocrisy 10 Still other assessments of the libertine concentrate on the kind and intensity of libertine demeanor Here the rake falls into any one of three categories extravagant libertine vicious libertine and philosophical libertine The extravagant rake is characterized by anti normative conduct throughout even though he finally settles down in matrimony Between 1663 and 1668 examples are Wellbred in James Howard s The English Mounsieur 1663 64 Philidor in James Howard s All Mistaken 1665 1672 and Celadon in Dryden s Secret Love 1667 In the 1690s Sir Harry Wildair in George Farquhar s The Constant Couple 1699 represents this kind of gentlemanly rake The extravagant rake is as promiscuous and impulsive as he is wild and frivolous and he finally finds his match in an equally extravagant and witty heroine 11 He is above all a self aware character who is what he wants to be who delights in those qualities with which he is endowed and who provides carnival release 12 Thus the extravagant rake is a comic figure because his actions are exaggerated But he is never a comic fool The vicious rake is invariably presented as a despicable if wealthy person who thrives on scheming and intrigue He is frequently married and abuses his wife examples are Pinchwife in The Country Wife or Sir John Brute in John Vanbrugh s The Provok d Wife Finally the philosophical rake the most attractive libertine figure is characterized by self control and refined behavior as well as by a capacity for manipulating others His pronounced libertine leanings are not supposed to contribute anything to the comic development of the plot Rather his libertinism is serious thus reflecting the philosophical principles of the pleasure seeking cynical Court Wits It is this kind of libertinism that has secured the notoriety of say William Wycherley s The Country Wife George Etherege s The Man of Mode and Sir Charles Sedley s Bellamira or The Mistress 13 Not only characters like Horner and Dorimant spring to mind but also Rodophil and Palamede in Dryden s Marriage a la Mode Longvil and Bruce in Thomas Shadwell s The Virtuoso and the eponymous heroine in Sedley s Bellamira 14 These plays are not representative of the average Restoration comedy however The reform of the ordinary rakish gentleman is the common pattern for the ending of the play Similarly extravagant rakes enter into marriage However as soon as the persistence of the rakes remains almost unquestioned it is difficult to decide whether libertines no matter of what colour play a major part in their authors satiric strategies Although Etherege s Dorimant is tamed by Harriet his conversion at the end is rather doubtful Similarly Wycherley s Horner is not punished satirically The libertine philosophy that the scintillating persistent rakes display seems to rebel against the narrow mindedness and hypocrisy lurking behind the facade of Puritan honesty and bourgeois moral standards It has been pointed out that the views of the philosophical libertine were strongly influenced by the philosophy of Thomas Hobbes 15 But then Hobbes was not necessarily an unquestioned ideal among the court elite and Hobbesian ideas certainly did not permeate many comedies John Dryden for one drew on Hobbesian ideas in his tragedies but these ideas are internalised by villains only 16 In his pursuit of pleasure and sensual satisfaction the philosophical libertine shows hedonistic Epicurean and anti rationalist patterns of thought In their ideal of life the libertines of this order may almost be compared to the genius of a somewhat later time like the genius the libertine rake is anti authoritarian anti normative and anti traditional It is above all the emotional distance from the objects of his desire as well as from the havoc he creates which renders the persistent rake so frightening Criticism of the libertine was heard not only in the 1670s when sex comedies were en vogue but also earlier whenever the male partner of the gay couple was blamed for having indulged in immoral behaviour One major counter argument was the call for poetic justice Shadwell and Dryden for example discussed the necessity of poetic justice to punish dissoluteness in their plays 17 To reintroduce moral standards the rake they demanded had to be reformed towards the end of the play If a persistent rake was allowed to propagate his philosophical libertinism poetische Ungerechtigkeit poetic injustice was likely to threaten the norm Shadwell s Epsom Wells may be regarded as a chief instigator of an excessive libertinism which is not questioned The play significantly ends with a divorce rather than the standard device of a marriage However the number of persistent rakes continued to grow together with an upsurge in cuckolding action and between 1672 and 1687 not all persistent rakes are punished satirically 18 Only towards the end of the century did the increasing criticism of dramatic immorality and obscenity make the authors return to more traditional moral standards In 1688 Shadwell s Squire of Alsatia initiated the return to a Horatian prodesse in comedy which had already been put forth in the Preface to The Humorist 1671 My design was it to reprehend some of the Vices and Follies of the Age which I take to be the most proper and most useful way of writing Comedy The Complete Works of Thomas Shadwell ed Montague Summers Vol I p 183 As a consequence future emphasis was no longer on libertine adventures but on the conversion and domestication of the dashing young men Thomas d Urfey s Love for Money 1691 and Colley Cibber s Love s Last Shift 1696 are moralizing plays and pave the way for the sentimental comedy of the early eighteenth century See also edit nbsp Look up rake in Wiktionary the free dictionary Bad boy archetype Lovable rogue Don Giovanni opera in two acts with music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Fop Lad culture Nice guy Promiscuity Shamela a novel that was a satire of Pamela Rake Australian TV series Rake American TV series References edit Harold Weber The restoration rake hero transformations in sexual understanding in seventeenth century England Univ Wisc 1986 ISBN 0 299 10690 X See generally Jean Gagen Congreve s Mirabell and the Ideal of the Gentleman in PMLA Vol 79 No 4 Sep 1964 pp 422 427 David Haldane Lawrence 2007 Sowing Wild Oats The Fallen Man in Late Victorian Society Melodrama Literature Compass vol 4 no 3 pp 888 898 2007 John Harold Wilson A Rake and His Times New York Farrar Straus and Young 1954 Fergus Linnane 2006 The Lives of the English Rakes London Portrait 19 20 Graham Parry 1986 Minds and Manners 1660 1688 in Stuart England edited by Blair Worden London Guild Publishing 176 8 Kenyon J P The Stuarts Fontana Edition 1966 p 188 Fergus Linnane 2006 The Lives of the English Rakes London Portrait 113 166 David S Berkeley The Penitent Rake in Restoration Comedy Modern Philology 49 1952 pp 223 33 C D Cecil Libertine and Precieux Elements in Restoration Comedy Essays in Criticism 9 1959 pp 242 44 Robert D Hume The Myth of the Rake in Restoration Comedy Studies in the Literary Imagination 10 1977 p 38 Robert Jordan The Extravagant Rake in Restoration Comedy Restoration Literature Critical Approaches ed Harold Love London 1972 pp 69 90 Jordan Extravagant Rake p 76 pp 87 88 For the special case of Bellamira see Sir Charles Sedley s The Mulberry Garden 1668 and Bellamira or The Mistress 1687 ed Holger Hanowell p lxxxvii ff the article on the rake is an excerpt from Hanowell s edition with permission by the editor Hume Myth of the Rake pp 42 44 Harold Weber The Restoration Rake Hero pp 52 91 97 Warren Chernaik Sexual Freedom in Restoration Literature Cambridge 1995 pp 22 51 Samuel I Mintz The Hunting of Leviathan Seventeenth Century Reactions to the Materialism and Moral Philosophy of Thomas Hobbes Cambridge 1962 Louis Teeter The Dramatic Uses of Hobbes Political Ideas ELH 3 1936 pp 140 69 Wolfgang Zach Poetic Justice Theorie und Geschichte einer literarischen Doktrin Tubingen 1986 pp 115 22 Zach Poetic Justice p 127 Hume Myth of the Rake pp 52 55Further reading editE Beresford Chancellor 1925 The Lives of the Rakes 6 vols Philip Allen Fergus Linnane 2006 The Lives of the English Rakes London Portrait D Squibb 2011 The Art of Being a Rake in 21st Century BritainExternal links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of rake at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rake stock character amp oldid 1188169671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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