Is a Rose is a Rose is a Rose? There seems little to distinguish Rose Maylie (who sweetly tends Oliver Twist in 1837) from Rosa Budd (the sweet childhood fiancé of Edwin Drood in 1870) or from Rose Maybud (the sweetly satirical heroine of Ruddigore in 1887). But from a literary point of view, would these Roses be as sentimentally one-dimensional by any other name?
Alastair Fowler made his name as a particularly learned Miltonist in 1968. Now officially eminent, he has written a physically slight book on many aspects of how names function in literary works that should prove differently enticing to both scholarly and common readers who have their own mental name-hoards. The book has already inspired, for instance, a glittering riff of a review by Colin Burrow in the London Review of Books.
Some chapters take up individual authors—Shakespeare, Milton, Thackeray, Dickens, James, Joyce, Nabokov; others include less categorizable topics—arrays of names, such as the Catalogue of Ships; the arcane rules of renaissance rebuses, acrostics, and anagrams; assumed and imposed names in literary hoaxes.
To get our thinking started, Fowler uses two technical terms taken from a Socratic dialogue: “Hermogenes argues that names are arbitrarily assigned; Cratylus thinks them natural and meaningful.” In fiction, John Doe attempts to signify as little as possible (perhaps too ostentatiously so) versus Sir Fopling Flutter, hardly “natural” in the sense of “likely to be found in real life” but clearly chosen to convey a specific