This one really works only in German, but I’ll render it into English. “What’s the dog’s name?” the new maid asks. “Herkules,” says the mistress. “Herr Kules?” responds the maid. “I’ll just call him Kules. I ain’t gonna call no dog Mister.”
How clever is Agatha Christie in calling her sleuth Hercule
Poirot. First make him Belgian, French would be too clever by half. Belgian is
close, but less grand, especially when followed by the homonym for “poireau,”
which is French (and Belgian) for simpleton. So, a heroic naïf? Not bad.
Names matter. Your name and being may somehow intertwine.
Not, I dare say, if yours is a very commonplace name, say Peter, Paul or John.
Or, if feminine, Jane, Joan or Jean. But even those may have implications, as
one may derive from the linguist Eric Partridge’s invaluable little book, “Name
This Child: A Handy Guide for Puzzled Parents,” on which I heavily rely.
Like in so many other things, there are fashions in names (even
fashions in crime, as we learn from ever more frequent mass shootings, most often
in schools). So, recently in France, there has been a Thierry lurking in every
other corner, and, in Germany, a Juergen or Joerg. In America, there have been
fewer pronouncedly trendy names, although David has been a bit of a contender,
especially among homosexuals. This presumably derives from Michelangelo’s
statue of David, which as male paragon corresponds to the Venus de Milo as
female. Partridge explicates David as “the man after God’s own kind,” and adds that
it strikes few as stemming “from the Hebrew verb ‘to love.’” But its bearers
are surely aware of its derivation.
My own name, John, acquires its vast popularity not so much
for deriving from the Hebrew “gift of the Lord,” as from the name of the Evangelist,
as Partridge suggests; but then why are Matthew, Mark and Luke not equally
frequent? This may well have to do with euphony. In English, at any rate, John
has an awesome thud, which the other three lack. There is something propulsive
about the Italian Giovanni, as also about the German, Johannes. The French
Jean, on the other hand, has a calm quality. Are French Johns more pacific than
German and Italian ones? I wonder.
The feminine Jane, Joan and Jean are equally appealing
because of a long, resonant vowel sound and minimal consonants. They are all
derived from Johanna or Joanna and the Hebrew for “God is gracious,” though
Jean is mostly Scottish, Jane mostly English, and Joan, presumably, equally
both.
These all used to be known as Christian names, of whatever religion
their bearers. But with the coming of P.C., the term“Christian” has become
insufficiently multidenominational, and “first names” has supplanted it. So too
the once fairly popular first name Christian has become relatively rare, as derived
from the Latin of ‘follower of Christ.”
But, with no great consistency, Christopher remains popular,
derived from the Greek for “Christ bearing,” and stemming from the well-known legend of
Christopheros, which has no basis outside of myth. Mythic too, too, was the gift-bearing and bringing Saint
Nicholas, for obvious reasons beloved of children, who would affectionately
have him be Saint Nick, or, coming by way of the German, abridged into Santa
Claus. By neither name, however, did he exist.
Indeed, Anglophone first names are often nicknames,
indicative especially of the American craving for familiarity with one another
that nicknames imply. So it is that even a president will want to be known as
Bill rather than William Jefferson Clinton and even the Rough Rider Roosevelt
welcomed Teddy for Theodore. So a Bob comes across more friendly than a Robert,
a Jim more egalitarian than a James.
You may wonder then why so many nicknames minimize their
being such, as John becomes Jack, Alexander turns (among others) into Sandy,
Elizabeth into Betty, and Margaret into Greta, Peggy, and Meg (among others),
none of them manifestly derived from the formal, longer version. I suppose that
the key here is trying to have it both ways: like yet also unlike, the latter
suggesting individuality within relatedness.
But as tendencies create countertendencies, so there are
clearly parents who don’t want their offspring made smaller, stuck with a
diminutive even in adulthood.. Hence we have names like Karen and Ingrid,
Austin and Otto, which cannot be diminished. Yet an obvious nickname has, as
far as I know, never miniaturized an Al Gore or a Max Beerbohm in the public
eye.
Now what about surnames that, especially often in the South,
have been turned into first names? They have the distinction of sounding
special, without being weirdly excogitated as are nowadays those of many
blacks. (They may be bona fide African, but how many of us would know that?)
To be sure, even many surnames have achieved a certain ordinariness, when a playwright
can be Taylor Mac, and a chanteuse Taylor Swift. They seem to beg for some kind
of felicitous appropriateness, yet I doubt whether either one of those Taylors
can do more with a needle than sew on a button.
Most surnames were clearly not conceived as firsts. They may
have begun as middle names, as when Mary Flannery O’Connor became Flannery
O’Connor, Lula Carson Smith, Carson McCullers, the (McCullers through
a brief marriage), and Nelle Harper Lee, Harper Lee. Note that
these are all women with family names moving into firsts, so as to retain something
of their original bearers’ identity as marriage changed their surnames—if they
got married, which many of them didn’t.
Moreover, surnames are not gender-limited. As being male
carries with it certain privileges, so not having a markedly feminine first
name may increase one’sstatus. So Leslie is a handily bisexual name, though
originally a merely female one, it allows for a woman, if only by
unacquaintedness, to pass for masculine.
Altogether, more significance is being attached to first
names these days, so that there are organizations such as BabyCenter, whose
head, Linda Murray, speaks of a database of 40,000 possible names, and says
“Now parents are really trying to choose a name that is unique, that suits
their child and that says something about their personality.” To be sure, if it
exists in a database, it is not going to remain unique forever, but perhaps
something close to it to it. Yet what about suiting the child’s personality,
when the infant by the time of christening can hardly have developed much of
one. To be sure many babies are said to look like Churchill, but looks are not
personality, or else there would be no end of Winstons around.
Name changing was a big thing in the old Hollywood, where
the idea was precisely to be less unique but more recognizably Anglo-Saxon, and
thus not Jewish or Polish or Russian or Hispanic, or whatever smelled of
immigration and therefore most likely impoverished lower-class. This affected
primarily surnames, but first names too underwent that supposed upgrading.
So Nathan Birnbaum became George Burns,; Jacob Julius
Garfinkle, John Garfied; Marion Levy, Paulette Goddard (the double D not very
French, although French was acceptable, e.g., Charles Boyer); Hedwig Eva Maria
Kiesler, Hedy Lamarr; Lucille Fay Le Sueur (too fancy) Joan Crawford;
JudithTuvim, Judy Holliday; Alfred Arnold Cocozza, Mario Lanza; Ramon Estevez,
Martin Sheen; Sophia Kosow, Sylvia Sydney; and so on and on.
This was not limited to actors. So producer Schmuel Gelbfisz
became Samuel Goldwyn; producer Robert Shapira became Robert Evans; director
Mihaly Kertesz, Michael Curtiz; director Raymond Nicholas Kienzle, Nicholas
Ray; and again so on and on. But there was also an opposite current, whereby
Hollywooders wanted to sound grander, more fanciful, as when, Mary Leta Dorothy Kaumeyer
turned into Dorothy Lamour; or Betty Joan Perske into Lauren Bacall, and so on
yet again. In some cases it was a matter of mere euphony rather than anything
more devious. Archibald Alexander Leach was Anglo-Saxon enough, but Cary
Grant just sounded better and was easier to remember,
These name changes now prevail among couturiers, almost none
of whom go by their original name. Of course Ralph Lifshitz prefers to be Ralph
Lauren, but Michael Kors could have stayed just as well with his legal, less
coarse Karl Anderson, Jr., perhaps just dropping the Jr.
Strangest of all are the changes of name among composers,
music being all sound, and thus a sound owned from childhood would seem
something to cling to even if odd or hard to pronounce. Obviously a nimble movie
composer could well turn Israel Baline into Irving Berlin, although there was
nothing Berlinese about him, but even those aiming a bit higher, i.e., mainly the
stage, have often changed their names-- in the case of Broadway, away from
their Jewishness. This is somewhat paradoxical, given that Jews, along with
gays, have constituted the most faithful Broadway audiences.
And then there are the Simons. My father, Joseph Simon pronounced Shimmon in his native Hungary and Simmon in his Yugoslav businessman
identity, and my mother, born Revesz or Reves, never mentioned our family’s
religion, though other people’s was sometimes brought up and perhaps discussed.
I never attended a church, synagogue or mosque, and this somehow seemed
perfectly normal to me.
It is only when I met, fairly late in life, my favorite
poet, Robert Graves, he asked me whether I was a Welsh or a Jewish Simon,
asserting that those were the only extant kinds. An extremely learned man, his
word, if I will be pardoned for putting it that way, was gospel. So, since
Welsh was out of the question, this meant a Jewish heritage of some kind,
though practice there never was. This made some sense in Belgrade, Yugoslavia,
now merely Serbia, where if you weren’t Greek Orthodox, you were lumped
together under the label Other, but just what kind of other hardly mattered,
unless you chose to make it an issue. However, when we emigrated, for some
reason religion became necessary, conceivably for one’s passport. And then,
much to my amusement, one could—and my father did—buy oneself and one’s family
into Old Catholicism, although what that was I had not the faintest idea. Roman
Catholicism, however, for better or worse, it was not.
Here in America, where Simon must have sounded strange to my
parents, they legally changed their name to Simmon, with the O pronounced more
or less as in Simmons. This, however, seemed neither fish nor fowl to me, so I
remained Simon and a thorough atheist. Latinos of all kinds pronounce it as rhyming
with bemoan, which I have become perfectly used and resigned to. As the saying
goes, what’s in a name anyway?