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1972-409,5, Print
A Harlot's Progress: Plate 3
1972-409,5, Print

A Harlot's Progress: Plate 3

Date1822
Designed and engraved by William Hogarth (1697 - 1764)
MediumEtching and line engraving
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1972-409,5
DescriptionLower margin reads: "Plate 3/ W. Hogarth inv:t pinx.t et sculp"
Label TextA Harlot's Progress is a six-part series by William Hogarth was the first of his popular "modern moral subjects" which depicted current social issues and topics of great interest through visual narratives. A Harlot's Progress tells the story of Moll Hackabout, a young woman who is coerced or willingly enters into an ill-fated life of prostitution. In this third scene, Moll Hackabout is no longer a kept woman, but a common prostitute living in Drury Lane area of London (based on the pewter measure on the floor which is inscribed 'James Dea[con?] in Drury Lane." She sits in bed, holding a broken watch, possibly a present or stolen from a client from the night before. Cheap portrait prints are pinned to the wall next to her bed and her mascarade costume (a cape, a brook, and pointed hat) are on display. As her servant brings her tea, a magistrate (identified as Sir. John Gonson) and his bailiffs arrive to arrive to arrest her.

Though printed from Hogarth's original copperplate (with some strengthening), this print is from the James Heath edition, published after 1822. Hogarth's copperplates were re-used after his death by his widow, Jane until her death in 1789. They were sold to the print publisher John Boydell who published them until his death in 1818. In 1822, James Heath was in possession of the plates and published at least four bound editions of the plates. For more, see Ronald Paulson, Hogarth's Graphic Works, Third Revised Edition (London: Print Room, 1989), pp. 20-21.