A Rake's Progress
/ə ˌreɪks ˈprəʊɡres/
/ə ˌreɪks ˈprɑːɡres/, /ə ˌreɪks ˈprɑːɡrəs/
- a series of eight paintings (1733-5) by William Hogarth telling the story of a rake (= a fashionable young man who leads a wild and immoral life) who finally dies in Bedlam (= a hospital in London for the mentally ill). Hogarth later made the paintings into a popular series of engravings (= cheap printed copies). The phrase 'rake's progress' is still used about somebody ruining their life by wild and immoral behaviour.