
To Arto, Arlo, Aldo, let us add Arvo, as in Arvo Pärt.
This blog combines two of my loves: portraiture and onomastics. In each entry you will find a name, an insight into the name's use, and a drawing of a person by that name.
Let's try to forget that the words "Call me Ishmael" mean anything, and think about how they sound.
Listen to the vowel sounds: ah, ee, soft i, aa. Four of them, each different, and each a soft, soothing note. Listen too to the way the line is bracketed by consonants. We open with the hard c, hit the l at the end of "call," and then, in a lovely act of symmetry, hit the l at the end of "Ishmael." "Call me Arthur" or "Call me Bob" are adequate but not, for musical reasons, as satisfying.
"Isn't Fred flirting perfectly outrageously with Lady Carrington!--She looks so sweet!" cried Flora, over her coffee-cup. "Don't you mind, Harry!"
They called Rico 'Harry'! His boy-name.
"Only a very little," said Harry. "L'uomo è cacciatore."
"Oh, now, what does that mean?" cried Flora, who always thrilled to Rico's bits of affectation.
"It means," said Mrs. Witt, leaning forward and speaking in her most suave voice, "that man is a hunter."
Even Flora shrank under the smooth acid of the irony. "Oh, well now!" she cried. "If he is, then what is woman?"
"The hunted," said Mrs. Witt, in a still smoother acid. "At least," said Rico, "she is always game!"
"Ah, is she though!" came Fred's manly, well-bred tones. "I'm not so sure."
Mrs. Witt looked from one man to the other, as if she were dropping them down the bottomless pit.
Steve Gevinson, Tavi's father, a tall, gawky man of about sixty, came downstairs, wearing pleated shorts and a polo shirt. (Everyone in the family wears glasses.) He shook hands with one of the Barbie cameramen, who introduced himself as Cameron.
"That's a good name for a cameraman!" Steve said.