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Rake (character)

 
Rake (character)

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Rake (character)



 
 
A rake is defined as a man that is habituated to immoral conduct. Rakes are frequently stock character
Stock character

A stock character is one which relies heavily on cultural types or names for his or her personality, manner of speech, and other characteristics....
s in novels. Often a rake is a man who wastes his (usually inherited
Inheritance

Inheritance is the practice of passing on property, Title s, debts, and obligations upon the death of an individual. It has long played an important role in human societies....
) fortune on wine, women and song
Wine, women and song

The clich? "wine, women, and song" is a rhetorical figure of a triad or hendiatris. Similar tripartite mottoes have existed for a long time in many languages, for example:...
, incurring lavish debt
Debt

Debt is that which is owed; usually referencing assets owed, but the term can cover other obligations. In the case of assets, debt is a means of using future purchasing power in the present before a summation has been earned....
s in the process. The rake is also frequently a cad: a man who seduces
Seduction

In sociology, seduction is the process of deliberately enticing a person to engage in some sort of behavior, frequently sexual in nature. The word seduction stems from Indo-European roots and means literally "to lead astray." As a result, the term may have a positive or negative connotation....
 a young woman and impregnates her before leaving, often to her social or financial ruin.






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William Hogarth 027
A rake is defined as a man that is habituated to immoral conduct. Rakes are frequently stock character
Stock character

A stock character is one which relies heavily on cultural types or names for his or her personality, manner of speech, and other characteristics....
s in novels. Often a rake is a man who wastes his (usually inherited
Inheritance

Inheritance is the practice of passing on property, Title s, debts, and obligations upon the death of an individual. It has long played an important role in human societies....
) fortune on wine, women and song
Wine, women and song

The clich? "wine, women, and song" is a rhetorical figure of a triad or hendiatris. Similar tripartite mottoes have existed for a long time in many languages, for example:...
, incurring lavish debt
Debt

Debt is that which is owed; usually referencing assets owed, but the term can cover other obligations. In the case of assets, debt is a means of using future purchasing power in the present before a summation has been earned....
s in the process. The rake is also frequently a cad: a man who seduces
Seduction

In sociology, seduction is the process of deliberately enticing a person to engage in some sort of behavior, frequently sexual in nature. The word seduction stems from Indo-European roots and means literally "to lead astray." As a result, the term may have a positive or negative connotation....
 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. These men and women are also known as heels. A bounder is an 'ill-bred, unscrupulous man', the social inferior of the cad. During the English Restoration
English Restoration

The English Restoration, or simply The Restoration began in 1660 when the English monarchy, Scottish monarchy and Irish monarchy were restored under Charles II of England after the Interregnum that followed the English Civil War....
 period (1660–1688), the word was used in a glamorous sense: the Restoration rake is a carefree, witty, sexually irresistible aristocrat typified by Charles II
Charles II of England

Charles II was the Monarchy of Kingdom of England, Kingdom of Scotland, and Kingdom of Ireland.His father Charles I of England Regicide#The regicide of Charles I of England at Palace of Whitehall on 30 January 1649, at the climax of the English Civil War....
's courtiers, the Earl of Rochester
John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester

John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester was an English libertine, a friend of King Charles II of England, and the writer of much satire and bawdy poetry....
 and the Earl of Dorset
Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset

Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset and 1st Earl of Middlesex was an English poet and courtier, son of the Richard Sackville, 5th Earl of Dorset ....
, who combined riotous living with intellectual pursuits and patronage of the arts. The Restoration rake is celebrated in the Restoration comedy
Restoration comedy

Restoration comedy refers to English Comedy written and performed in the English Restoration period from 1660 to 1710. After public stage performances had been banned for 18 years by the Puritan regime, the re-opening of the theatres in 1660 signalled a rebirth of English drama....
 of the 1660s and 1670s. After the reign of Charles II, and especially after the Glorious Revolution
Glorious Revolution

The Glorious Revolution, also called the Revolution of 1688, was the overthrow of British monarchy James II of England in 1688 by a union of Parliament of England with an invading army led by the Dutch Republic stadtholder William III of England , who as a result ascended the English throne as William III of England....
 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
Debtor's prison

DefinitionA prison for those who are unable to pay a debt...
, venereal disease, or, in the case of William Hogarth
William Hogarth

William Hogarth was a major England painting, Printmaking, pictorial satire, Social criticism and editorial cartoonist who has been credited with pioneering western sequential art....
's A Rake's Progress
A Rake's Progress

A Rake's Progress is a series of eight paintings by 18th century England artist William Hogarth. The canvases were produced in 1732?33 then engraved and published in print form in 1735....
, insanity
Insanity

Traditionally, insanity or madness is the behavior whereby a person flouts societal norms and may become a danger to themselves and others....
 in Bedlam
Bethlem Royal Hospital

The Bethlem Royal Hospital of London is a psychiatric hospital in Beckenham, Kent. Although no longer in its original location and buildings, it is recognised as the world's first and oldest institution to provide care for the mentally ill....
.

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
Hell

In many religious traditions, Hell is a place of suffering and punishment in the afterlife, often in the underworld. Religions with a linear Divinity history often depict Hell as endless ....
, making them hotter. The actual etymology
Etymology

Etymology is the study of the roots and history of words; and how their form and meaning have changed over time.In languages with a long detailed history, etymology makes use of philology, the study of how words change from culture to culture over time....
 of the word is from the Old Norse reikall, meaning "vagrant" or "wanderer"; this was borrowed into Middle English
Middle English

Middle English is the name given by historical linguistics to the diverse forms of the English language spoken between the Norman conquest of England of 1066 and about 1470, when the #Chancery Standard, a form of London-based English, began to become widespread, a process aided by the introduction of the printing press into England by William...
 as rakel (possibly via Dutch
Dutch language

Dutch is a West Germanic languages spoken by over 22 million people as a first language, and about 5 million people as a second language."1% of the EU population claims to speak Dutch well enough in order to have a conversation." Outside the European Union the number of second language speakers of Dutch is very small. Most native...
 rekel, meaning "scoundrel").

The categories of the Rake in Restoration Comedy


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. Libertinistic attitudes, such as (sexual) licentiousness, alcoholism, scouring and gaming, 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 libertinistic 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 room
Drawing room

A drawing room is a room in a house where visitors may be entertained. The name is derived from the sixteenth-century terms "withdrawing room" and "withdrawing chamber," which remained in use through the seventeenth century, and made its first written appearance in 1642 ....
s, is in sharp contrast to a contemptible debauch, who indulges in fornication, alcoholism, and hypocrisy. Still other assessments of the libertine concentrate on the kind and intensity of libertinistic demeanour. 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
James Howard

James or Jim Howard may refer to:* James Howard MP , British Liberal politician, manufacturer and agriculturalist* James F. Howard, Jr....
'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 Hary Wildair in George Farquhar
George Farquhar

George Farquhar was an Ireland dramatist. He is noted for his contributions to late Restoration comedy, particularly for his plays The Recruiting Officer and The Beaux' Stratagem ....
'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. 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." 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 Vanbrugh's The Provok'd Wife). Finally, the philosophical rake, the most attractive libertine figure, is characterized by self-control and refined behaviour as well as by a capacity for manipulating others. His pronounced libertinistic 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
William Wycherley

William Wycherley was an England dramatist of the English Restoration period....
's The Country Wife
The Country Wife

The Country Wife is a Restoration comedy written in 1675 by William Wycherley. A product of the tolerant early English Restoration period, the play reflects an aristocracy and anti-Puritan ideology, and was controversial for its sexual explicitness even in its own time....
, George Etherege
George Etherege

Sir George Etherege was an England dramatist. He wrote the plays The Comical Revenge or, Love in a Tub in 1664, She Would if She Could in 1668, and The Man of Mode in 1676....
's The Man of Mode
The Man of Mode

The Man of Mode is a Restoration comedy by George Etherege, written in 1676 and first performed March 2 of the same year. Gibbons argues that the play "offers the comedy of manners in its most concentrated form"....
, and Sir Charles Sedley
Charles Sedley

Sir Charles Sedley, 5th Baronet , was an England wit, dramatist and politician....
's Bellamira: or, The Mistress (see Bellamira (play)
Bellamira (play)

Bellamira: or, The Mistress is a comedy by Sir Charles Sedley, published in 1687, partly modelled on Terence's Eunuchus...
). 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 Shadwell's The Virtuoso and the eponymous heroine in Sedley's Bellamira. 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 libertinistic philosophy that the scintillating persistent rakes display seems to rebel against the narrow-mindedness and hypocrisy lurking behind the façade 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
Thomas Hobbes

Thomas Hobbes was an English philosophy, remembered today for his work on political philosophy. His 1651 book Leviathan established the foundation for most of Western political philosophy from the perspective of social contract theory....
. But then, Hobbes was not necessarily an unquestioned ideal among the court élite, and Hobbesian ideas certainly did not permeate many comedies. Dryden
Dryden

Dryden may refer to:...
, for one, drew on Hobbesian ideas in his tragedies but these ideas are internalized by villains only. 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 libertinistic 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
Poetic justice

Poetic justice is a Literary technique in which virtue is ultimately rewarded or vice punishment, often in modern literature by an irony twist of fate intimately related to the character's own conduct....
. Thomas Shadwell
Thomas Shadwell

Thomas Shadwell was an England poet and playwright who was appointed poet laureate in 1689....
 and Dryden, for example, discussed the necessity of poetic justice in order to punish dissoluteness in their plays. 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. 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
Shadwell

Shadwell is an inner-city district situated within the London Borough of Tower Hamlets located on the north bank of the Thames between Wapping to the west and Limehouse to the east....
’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 libertinistic adventures but on the conversion and domestication of the dashing young men. D'Urfey's Love for Money (1691) and Cibber's Love's Last Shift (1696) are moralizing plays and pave the way for the sentimental comedy of the early eighteenth century.

In Fiction


Well known fictional rakes and cads include:

  • Dorimant, the hero of The Man of Mode
    The Man of Mode

    The Man of Mode is a Restoration comedy by George Etherege, written in 1676 and first performed March 2 of the same year. Gibbons argues that the play "offers the comedy of manners in its most concentrated form"....
     by George Etherege
    George Etherege

    Sir George Etherege was an England dramatist. He wrote the plays The Comical Revenge or, Love in a Tub in 1664, She Would if She Could in 1668, and The Man of Mode in 1676....
    , based upon the historical Earl of Rochester mentioned below and above
  • Compeyson, the man who jilted Miss Havisham
    Miss Havisham

    Miss Havisham is a significant character in the Charles Dickens novel Great Expectations . She is a wealthy spinster, who lives in her ruined mansion with her niece, Estella Havisham, while she herself is described as looking like "the witch of the place"....
     in Great Expectations
    Great Expectations

    Great Expectations is a novel by Charles Dickens first serial ised in All the Year Round from 1 December 1860 to August 1861. It is regarded as one of his greatest and most sophisticated novels, and is one of his most enduringly popular, having been adapted for stage and screen over 250 times....
     by Charles Dickens
    Charles Dickens

    Charles John Huffam Dickens, Royal Society of Arts , pen-name "Boz", was the most popular English people novelist of the Victorian era, as well as a vigorous Reform movement....
  • Alec d'Urberville, Tess's seducer in Tess of the d'Urbervilles
    Tess of the d'Urbervilles

    Tess of the d'Urbervilles: A Pure Woman Faithfully Presented is a novel by Thomas Hardy, first published in 1891. It initially appeared in a censored and serialised version, published by the British illustrated newspaper, The Graphic....
     by Thomas Hardy
    Thomas Hardy

    Thomas Hardy, Order of Merit was an England author of the naturalism movement, though he regarded himself primarily as a poet and composed novels mainly for financial gain....
  • Rodolphe Boulanger, Madame Bovary
    Madame Bovary

    Madame Bovary is a novel by Gustave Flaubert, often considered his masterpiece. The novel focuses on a doctor's wife, Emma Bovary, who has adultery and lives beyond her means in order to escape the banalities and emptiness of provincial life....
    's principal lover
  • Harry Paget Flashman
    Harry Paget Flashman

    Brigadier-General Sir Harry Paget Flashman Victoria Cross Order of the Bath Order of the Indian Empire is a fictional character created by George MacDonald Fraser, but based on the character "Flashman" in Tom Brown's Schooldays, a semi-autobiographical work by Thomas Hughes....
    , chief character of a series of novels by George MacDonald Fraser
    George MacDonald Fraser

    George MacDonald Fraser, Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire was a United Kingdom author of both historical novels and non-fiction books, as well as several screenplays....
  • Don Juan
    Don Juan

    Don Juan or Don Giovanni is a legendary, fictional libertine whose story has been told many times by many authors. El burlador de Sevilla y convidado de piedra, by Tirso de Molina, is a play set in the fourteenth century that was published in Spain around 1630....
  • Mollie Flannigan
  • Dorian Gray
    Dorian Gray

    Dorian Gray is the main character of Oscar Wilde's novel The Picture of Dorian Gray.Dorian Gray may also refer to:* Dorian Gray , a British film adaptation of The Picture of Dorian Gray to be released in 2009...
  • Tom Rakewell, the protagonist of William Hogarth
    William Hogarth

    William Hogarth was a major England painting, Printmaking, pictorial satire, Social criticism and editorial cartoonist who has been credited with pioneering western sequential art....
    's series of paintings, A Rake's Progress
    A Rake's Progress

    A Rake's Progress is a series of eight paintings by 18th century England artist William Hogarth. The canvases were produced in 1732?33 then engraved and published in print form in 1735....
  • The Prodigal Son, one of Jesus
    Jesus

    Jesus of Nazareth , also known as Jesus Christ, is the central figure of Christianity and is revered by most Christian churches as the Son of God and the Incarnation ....
    ' parable
    Parable

    A parable is a brief, succinct story, in prose or Verse , that illustrates a moral or religious lesson. It differs from a fable in that fables use animals, plants, inanimate objects, and forces of nature as characters, while parables generally feature human characters....
    s
  • The Vicomte de Valmont, the consummate seducer of the novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses
    Les Liaisons dangereuses

    Les Liaisons dangereuses is a France epistolary novel by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos, first published in four volumes by Durand Neveu from March 23 1782....
  • Rupert of Hentzau
    Rupert of Hentzau

    Rupert of Hentzau is a sequel by Anthony Hope to The Prisoner of Zenda, 1895 in literature, but not 1898 in literature....
  • Angel (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) in his persona as Liam of Galway, before he was made into a vampire
  • Caledon Hockley, Rose DeWitt Bukater's fiance in Titanic
    Titanic (1997 film)

    Titanic is a 1997 United States romantic film directed, written, co-produced and co-edited by James Cameron about the sinking of the RMS Titanic....
  • George Wickham, of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice
    Pride and Prejudice

    Pride and Prejudice is a novel by Jane Austen. First published on 28 January 1813, it is her second published novel. Its manuscript was initially written between 1796 and 1797 in Steventon, Hampshire, where Austen lived in the rectory....
  • Pechorin, the anti-hero of A Hero of Our Time
    A Hero of Our Time

    A Hero of Our Time is a short novel by Mikhail Lermontov, written in 1839 in literature and revised in 1841 in literature. It is an example of the superfluous man novel, noted for its compelling Byronic hero Pechorin and for the beautiful descriptions of the Caucasus....
     by Mikhail Lermontov
  • Harry Horner, from The Country Wife by William Wycherly
  • Dmitri Karamazov sensualist elder brother of Doestyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov
    The Brothers Karamazov

    The Brothers Karamazov is the final novel by the Russian author Fyodor Dostoyevsky, and is generally considered the culmination of his life's work....
  • Lovelace, suitor to Clarissa
    Clarissa

    Samuel Richardson's Clarissa, or, the History of a Young Lady epistolary novel, published in 1748 in literature, tells the tragic story of a heroine whose quest for virtue is continually thwarted by her family....
     in Samuel Richardson
    Samuel Richardson

    Samuel Richardson was an 18th-century England writer and Printer . He is best known for his three epistolary novels: Pamela , Clarissa and The History of Sir Charles Grandison ....
    's novel. Lovelace (a pun on Loveless) is as much interested in power as seduction.
  • Michael Moorcock's
    Michael Moorcock

    Michael John Moorcock is an English writer primarily of science fiction and fantasy fiction who has also published a number of literary novels....
     character Colonel Pyat presents one of the least appealing forms of the rake archetype, despite being historically a little too late for the classic definiton of a rake.


In History


Historical figures who have informed the stock character include:

  • Cagliostro
  • Lord Byron
  • John Mytton
    John Mytton

    John Mytton was a notable United Kingdom Eccentricity and English Regency Rake .John "Mad Jack" Mytton was born to a family of Shropshire squires with a lineage stretching back some 500 years earlier than his day....
  • Giacomo Casanova
    Giacomo Casanova

    Giacomo Girolamo Casanova de Seingalt was a Republic of Venice adventurer and author. His main book Histoire de ma vie , part autobiography and part memoir, is regarded as one of the most authentic sources of the customs and norms of European social life during the 18th century....
  • Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset
    Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset

    Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset and 1st Earl of Middlesex was an English poet and courtier, son of the Richard Sackville, 5th Earl of Dorset ....
  • John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester
    John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester

    John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester was an English libertine, a friend of King Charles II of England, and the writer of much satire and bawdy poetry....
  • Sir Charles Sedley
    Charles Sedley

    Sir Charles Sedley, 5th Baronet , was an England wit, dramatist and politician....
  • John Wilkes
    John Wilkes

    John Wilkes was an England Radicalism , journalist and politician.In the Middlesex election dispute, he fought for the right of voters?rather than the British House of Commons?to determine their representatives....
  • Charles Mohun, 4th Baron Mohun
    Charles Mohun, 4th Baron Mohun

    Charles Mohun, 4th Baron Mohun, was an Politics of England best known for his frequent participation in duels and his reputation as a Rake ....
  • Colonel Francis Charteris
    Colonel Francis Charteris

    Colonel Francis Charteris, , nicknamed "The Rape-Master General," was a Scotland aristocrat who had earned a substantial amount of money through gambling and the South Sea Bubble....
  • Hellfire Club
    Hellfire Club

    The Hellfire Club was the popular name for a number of supposed exclusive clubs for high society Rake s established all over Great Britain and Ireland in the 18th century....
  • Marquis de Sade
    Marquis de Sade

    Donatien Alphonse Fran?ois de Sade, Marquis de Sade was a France aristocrat, revolutionary and novelist. His novels were philosophical novel and sadomasochistic, exploring such controversial subjects as rape, bestiality and necrophilia....
  • Francis Dashwood
    Francis Dashwood, 15th Baron le Despencer

    Francis Dashwood, 15th Baron le Despencer was an England Rake and politician, Chancellor of the Exchequer and founder of The Hellfire Club....
  • Beauchamp Bagenal
    Beauchamp Bagenal

    Beauchamp Bagenal , Ireland rake, buck, duellist, was born in County Carlow in 1741. He inherited the family estates aged 11. Bagenal gained a reputation as a hell raiser and serial heartbreaker, and was reportedly described as the handsomest man in Ireland....


The stock character of the rake can be contrasted with some others. The town drunk
Town drunk

The town drunk is a stock character, almost always male, who is drunk more often than sobriety.The town drunk typically dwells in a small enough town that he is the only conspicuous alcoholism....
 is frequently intoxicated, and impoverished by heavy drinking, but here the focus is on the character's alcoholic
Alcoholism

Alcoholism is a term with multiple and sometimes conflicting definitions to describe the detrimental effects of alcohol intake.In common and historic usage, alcoholism refers to any condition that results in the continued consumption of alcoholic beverages despite health problems and negative social consequences....
 state rather than on sexual excess; the town drunk is typically older than the rake.

See also

  • Promiscuity
    Promiscuity

    In human sexual behaviour, promiscuity denotes casual sex between many partners. Behavior includes sex with partners who are not one's spouse. It is common in some animal species....
  • Fop
    Fop

    Fop became a pejorative term for a foolish man over-concerned with his appearance and clothes in 17th century England. Some of the very many similar alternative terms are: "coxcomb", fribble, "popinjay" , fashion-monger, and "ninny"....