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BABY NAMES FROM BOOKS: 20 Lost Literary Boys’ Names

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Last week we unearthed twenty long lost literary girls’ names–some of which have rarely been used outside of books, plays and poetry– and now we turn to the boys’ equivalents.  The diverse sources of these creative baby names range from Shakespeare to Stoppard– and be aware that, as before, the characters who bear them are not necessarily paragons of virtue.

ARKADY. A Russian saint’s name from the Greek meaning “from Arcadia,” it belongs to a genteel character in Turgenev’s Fathers and Sons and a much less benign one in Dostoyevsky’s Crime and Punishment, and is also a key figure in Gorky Park by Martin Cruz Smith.

BALTHAZAR, the name of one of the three wise men, is scattered throughout literature, from Shakespeare ’s plays to the rambunctious title character of J P Donleavy’s The Beastly Beatitudes of Balthazar B.jem finch

BEALE. Beale Farange is the heroine’s father in Henry JamesWhat Maisie Knew; it’s a surname that comes from the French meaning “handsome.”

CLAUDIO. A Shakespearean favorite, appearing in both Much Ado About Nothing and Measure for Measure; it’s a Latin clan name meaning “lame”–one of those literal meanings that can be ignored in the modern world.

DUNCAN. Duncan Idaho is the brave hero of Frank Herbert’s classic fantasy series Dune. It’s a Scottish name meaning “brown warrior” and a nameberry favorite, despite some people’s association with Dunkin’ Donuts.

FLINT. A legendary pirate–and also a parrot–in Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island. A strong, modern-sounding word name. (more…)

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Posted in Latin baby names, Russian baby names, Shakespearean baby names, Uncategorized, baby names from books, biblical names, boys' names, creative baby names, creative names for boys, historic names, literary baby names, name ideas, names from poetry, namesakes, neglected names, overlooked names, poetic names, romantic names, undiscovered names, unusual baby names | 12 Comments »

BABY NAMES FROM BOOKS: 20 Lost Literary Girls’ Names

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

Within the pages of books from all periods of literary history—from classical, metaphysical and Elizabethan poetry and plays to the Romantics and the Realists, right up to modern novels—can be found gems of names that have been lost to time, either because they’ve been identified with a singular character or simply because they’ve gone out of style.  Here are twenty such girls’ names, with the boys group to follow next week.

old-fashioned-mother-and-daughter-readingALIAAlia Atreides is a key figure in the Dune sci-fi series created by Frank Herbert, appearing in four of the novels.  A variant of the Hebrew Aliyah, it means “ascending.”

BRIONY is the young girl who sets the plot in motion in Ian McEwan’s Atonement.  It’s a variant spelling of Bryony, the name of a perennial vine, coming from the Greek meaning ‘to grow luxuriantly’. 

CALIXTACalixta is an alluring woman in Kate Chopin’s At the ‘Cadian Ball, a novel set in the Creole south at the turn of the century.  In Greek, it means “most beautiful.”

CATRIONA is the eponymous heroine of a novel by Robert Louis Stevenson. This Gaelic form of Katherine is pronounced ka-TREE-na.

CLEA—An artistic character in the volume of the Lawrence Durrell Alexandria Quartet that bears her name—and also the sorceress lover of Dr. Strange in the Marvel Comics universe. 

CORINNA –After appearing as the main female character in Ovid’s Amores, Corinna became a favorite in 17th century poetry, including Robert Herrick’s Corinna’s Going A-Maying. It’s a Latinized form of a Greek name meaning maiden.

FANTINE—The name of the beautiful, naïve, self-sacrificing character in Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables.

GINEVRA—The name of a young English girl in Charlotte Brontë’s Villette, this is the Italian form of Guinevere (meaning “fair, white, smooth” ) and also is the Italian version of Geneva.

IANTHE—One of the most poetic of names, found in the romantic verse of Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley (who chose it for his daughter) and Walter Savage Landor.  In Greek, it means “violet flower”

KAMALA—A beautiful courtesan in Hermann Hesse’s Siddhartha.  Also another name for the Hindu goddesses Lakshmi and Durga.

LILIA—A high-spirited character in E. M. Forster’s Where Angels Fear to Tread, and one of the prettiest of the Lil names.

MALTA—In Dickens’ Bleak House, one of the three happy children—along with Quebec and Woolwich—of the Bagnet family, which would make an unusual place name.

MERIDIAN.  The spirited title character of Alice Walker’s 1976 novel, a word name with several possible nicknames

PERSIS—the wife of the protagonist of William Dean Howell’s The Rise and Fall of Silas Lapham. It’s a Greek New Testament name meaning ‘Persian woman.’

PRAIRIE –a modern Valley Girl (she works at the Bodhi Dharma Pizza Temple) in Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland.

TAMORA—A Gothic queen in Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, this is a variation of the Hebrew Tamar, meaning “date palm.

TEMPLETemple Drake is a complex character who appears in two William Faulkner novels, Sanctuary and Requiem for a Nun.

THISBE—A mythical character in the play-within-the-play in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, retelling the tragic Greek tale of Pyramus and Thisbe.

TITANIA—The powerful queen of the fairies in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s DreamA Latinate name, probably meaning ‘of the Titans.’

TRILBY—In George du Maurier’s eponymous novel, Trilby is described as “out of the common clever, simple, humorous, honest, brave, and kind,” who unfortunately falls under the spell of Svengali.

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Posted in Uncategorized, ancient names, baby names from books, classic baby names, exotic baby names, girl names, girls' names, literary baby names, names from poetry, poetic names, romantic names, undiscovered names, unique baby names, unusual baby names, vintage baby names | 20 Comments »

WORD NAMES FOR BABIES: What’s in a word?

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

For several years now, word names have been singled out as being at the extreme edge of cool—we may have been guilty of pushing that edge ourselves at times.  But I’m starting to wonder if it’s time to pull back a little, and put the brakes on.  Celebrities have tried to outdo each other to sometimes eye-rolling effect in the effort to find a ‘unique’, attention-grabbing word name : I’m not naming names but I might mention a few words like zeppelin and pirate and peanut.

word-blocks Of course there are word names and there are word names and probably the most acceptable and appealing are the centuries-old Virtue names created by the early and most zealous Pilgrims to display their righteous religiosity.  Though  such excessive male phrase-names as Fight-the-good-fight-of-faith and Fly-fornication are long gone, the simpler girl virtue names have not only survived but some are now downright trendy: Grace, Hope, Faith, and, more recently, Felicity, True and Honor.

Other worthy examples include:

AMITY

CHARITY

CLARITY

COMFORT

MERCY (more…)

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Posted in animal names, baby name debates, baby name popularity, boys' names, celebrity baby names, creative names for boys, creative names for girls, flower names, girl names, girls' names, name ideas, nature names, new names, poetic names, quirky names, unique baby names, unusual baby names, weird baby names, word names | 18 Comments »

POETIC BABY NAMES

Monday, April 13th, 2009

poetry Since April is National Poetry Month, this seems like a perfect time to look at some of the most poetic of baby names. We’ve already seen starbabies named Poet (Soleil Moon Frye), Sonnet (Forest Whitaker), Auden (Noah Wyle), Tennyson (Russell Crowe), and of course any number of Dylans (traceable back to poet Thomas). By some quirk of fate — or maybe it’s prophecy fulfillment – poets in general seem to have more poetic surnames than prose writers do.  Here are some poet-name possibilities:

ANGELOU
AUDEN
BARAKA
BLAKE
BLY
BOGAN
BRONTE
BYRON
CAMPBELL
CAREW
CHAUCER
CORSO
CRANE
DANTE
DICKINSON
ELIOT
EMERSON
FLETCHER
FROST
HARDY
HERRICK
JARRELL
KEATS
KENYON
KIPLING
LANDOR
LARKIN
LORCA
LOWELL
MACAULAY
MARLOWE
MARVELL
MERRILL
MERWIN
MILLAY
MILTON
MISTRAL
MORRISON
NERUDA
OLIVER
OWEN
PAZ
POE
QUARLES
RUMI
RUSKIN
SHELLEY
SPENSER
TENNYSON
THOREAU
VAUGHAN
VERLAINE
WHITMAN
WHITTIER
WYATT
YEATS

Another group of poetically romantic names consists of the idealized Greek, Latinate, and other names used by the early English pastoral poets, in verse dedicated to their “coy mistresses” and such:

ALTHEA
AMARANTHA
AMINTA
ANTHEA
AUDRIA
CELIA
CLORINDA
CORINNA
CHLOE
CHLORIS
DELIA
DORINDA
FAWNIA
FLORA
GRATIANA
ISABELL
JULIA
LAURA
LUCASTA
PERILLA
PHILOMELA
PHILLIDA
PHILLIS
PHOEBE
ROSALIND
ROSALINE
SABRINA
SAMELA
SILVIA
VEVINA

And then there are the names connected to poetry via goddesses, muses, and other poetic associations–here are just a few of the almost endless possibilities:

ARIEL– The name of Sylvia Plath’s most famous group of poems
BEATRICEDante’s muse in The Divine Comedy
BRIANA –one of many symbolic names in Spenser’s The Faerie Queen
BRIGID — Celtic goddess of poetry and song
CALLIOPE — The Greek muse of epic poetry
CERIDWEN — Legendary Welsh enchantress said to possess the cauldron of poetic inspiration
CLARINDA — Invented by Edmund Spenser and used by Robert Burns in Verses to Clarinda
DEVIN — Gaelic name meaning musical poet
ELAINE and ENID –Revived by Tennyson in Idylls of the King
ERATO –The Greek muse of love poetry
EULALIE — Subject of a Poe poem
EVANGELINE — Popularized via the Longfellow poem
FIAMMETTA — From Ariosto’s epic poem Orlando Furioso
IANTHE — Appears in the poetry of Byron and Shelley; the latter used it for his daughter
LEILA — Arabic name popularized in the works of Byron
LENORE — An Edgar Allan Poe favorite
MALVINA — invented by the Scottish poet James Macpherson
PAMELA — invented by pastoral poet Sir Philip Sidney
THALIA — Greek muse of idyllic poetry
UNA — Symbolic name used in Spenser’s The Faerie Queen
VANESSA — Created by Jonathan Swift for his autobiographical poem Cadenus and Vanessa
ZULEIKA — Heroine of one of Byron’s narrative poems

And finally there are the word names that cut straight to the chase:

BALLAD
BARD/BAIRD
CADENCE
CANZONE
HAIKU
LYRIC
MUSE
OTTAVA
POEM
POESY
POET
POETICA
QUATRAIN
SESTINA
SONNET
VILLANELLE

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