Magic of a Name


Magic of a Name

                          By Vengrai  Parthasarathy

    There is a romance attached to names, names like Juliet, Cleopatra and
Helen They demand attention and conjure up visions of their romantic escapades.

There are of course names like Heidi (the madam), and  Monica Lewinsky the errant intern of Clinton fame, which straightaway  puts you off., though some is romance attached to them.   Names which are often remembered have a tale hanging from them. . Humor lends its hand and, in fact,, the history of  names is leavened by humour.

A list sent by a correspondent to an American  publication , said to have been picked up from a telephone directory ,.had  names like: Doris Clost, Rhoda Byke, Isabella, Ringling, Dan Druff !

    The veteran comedian Bob Hope’s name has been punned so many times but the one that takes the cake is a publicity blurb for the movie ‘Where there is Life’. It said Where there is life, there is hope, Bob Hope.

    One Mr. Rangaraj  was celebrating  his fiftieth birthday and a friend sent him a one word message: ’Rangarajulations’. I have heard of one Miss George who appeared in a beauty contest. She was referred to   as   ‘Miss Georgeous’ by an imaginative reporter..

In America one finds some quaint names. Girls being called  India, for instance, is not uncommon. There was this family in Ohio whose surname was Christmas. It happened that the son brought home a girl whom he married. Her name was, believe it or not, Merry.. No wonder they had Merry Christmas throughout the year. A dog owner a named his pet Stud.  Is it any wonder that this pekingese fathered   litter after litter during his life time.

   A gent whose name was Victor Emmanuel ( in India) got married and a friend sent him a book titled  “In Marriage  there Are no Losers”   and inscribed it to Victor and the Vanquished.. A typographical error resulted in the name of Dorothy Lambour the Hollywood actress of Bob Hope’s movies, being spelt without the letter’b’. The Publicity Chief went ga-ga over this as Lamour had the flavour of both  glamour and  amour. The name stuck.

    What’s in a name? queried Shakespeare  in his ‘Romeo and Julie’ and he went on to say “That which we call Rose, By any other name will smell as sweet”. But we know that io the Bard of Avon, to conjure a name was to evoke a spirit –witness the  plethora of names he had given to his characters in his famous plays.

    Mr. Vaikunt was an airline employee and a new acquaintance kept referring to him as Mr. Kailash , presumably by association of ideas, both names meaning paradise.. This mistake occurred once too often to the irritation of Mr.Vaikunt. On one  occasion  Mr.Vaikunt  who was on the telephone angrily told his errant friend” Mr.Kailash has gone to vaikuntam. Try him there”. And, he banged the telephone.

  The subject of names I not without its Churchilliana. Here’s one ( perhaps apocryphal). One Mr. Bostom had joined the British P.M’s office and when Churchill heard this man’s name , he is reported to have remarked:’ What a queer moniker!  Its neither this nor that’. .Only a Churchill could have come up with such an off-the-cuff remark.

Dear Reader, it needs some figuring out. Got it?

About Vengrai Parthasarathy

A profile of Vengrai Parthasarathy (from Sahitya Akademi): Mr.V.V. Parthasarathy (Vengrai) the author is 88+ years old.He graduated from the Madras University and stayed on to complete his Law degree in the same Uiversity. Again in that University, he did a two-year course in International Law and Constitutional Law under late Professor C.H.Alexandrowicz. He had also done a course in Mass Communitations . Mr. Parthasarathy has had his professional career in the Public Relations, all of them in Public sectors like Indian Airlines, State Trading Corporation,Bharat Electronics and lastly in the Bharat Heavy Electricals, Hyderabad from which he retired. Over the years Mr. Parthasarathy has published several rticles in a variety pf Dailies and Periodicals, including The Hindu, The Statesman,The Hindustan Times, the Indian Express and The Indian Year Book Of International Affairs.Over a hundred of them have been embedded in the Vengrai.com Mr. Parthasarathy has published two books One titled THIRUPPAVAI published by the Ramakrishna Mission and a book titled SELECT HYMNS FROM THE DIVYA PRAPANTHAM published by the renowned Sahitya Akademi. He is now a retired Author who has settled down in USA with his two children, son VijayParthasarathy married to Hema, ( a Dentist) and daughter Rohini married to Partha Mandayam, a Computer Scientist, —besides grandchildren.

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