In this week’s Dispatches from The Secret Library, Dr Oliver Tearle examines the supposed literary origins of a popular girls’ name
Where does the name Imogen come from? Some name origins are more interesting than others. And the origin of the girls’ name Imogen is more interesting than most.
Imogen is a character in Cymbeline, a late play by William Shakespeare. This ‘problem play’ isn’t one of Shakespeare’s most popular plays: Samuel Johnson dismissed its ‘unresisting imbecility’, while George Bernard Shaw called it ‘stagey trash of the lowest melodramatic order’. The American-born novelist and short-story writer Henry James, in 1896, was kinder: ‘The thing is a florid fairy-tale, of a construction so loose and unpropped that it can scarce be said to stand upright at all, and of a psychological sketchiness that never touches firm ground, but plays, at its better times, with an indifferent shake of golden locks, in the high, sunny air of delightful poetry.’
As Cedric Watts – one of the few editors who has restored Innogen to the play – has observed, the First Quarto (Q1) printing of Much Ado about Nothing opened with the stage-direction for the opening of Act 1, scene 1: ‘Enter Leonato gouernour of Messina, Innogen his wife, Hero his daughter, and Beatrice his neece, with a messenger.’ Watts’ edition of the play, Much Ado About Nothing (Wordsworth Classics)
But at least since the eighteenth century when Lewis Theobald edited Shakespeare’s plays, Innogen has been quietly removed. ‘I have ventured to expunge [her name]’, Theobald wrote; ‘there being no mention of her through the play, no one speech addressed to her, nor one syllable spoken to her.’ But the fact that there’s an Innogen in the early printings of another play lends credence to the idea that ‘Innogen’ in Cymbeline became ‘Imogen’ thanks to a printing error.
As Rowland Wymer has argued, the idea that Imogen arose as a misprint of Innogen seems highly probable. Innogen was the wife of the legendary founder of Britain, Brute the Trojan, and Innogen is the form of the name used by Raphael Holinshed, one of Shakespeare’s sources for his play. What’s more, Shakespeare’s contemporary, the astrologer Simon Forman, left an account of an original performance of Cymbeline from the early 1600s, and Forman, too, refers to Cymbeline’s daughter as Innogen.
So, ‘Imogen’ arose as a name because a seventeenth-century printer mistook ‘Innogen’ for ‘Imogen’.
Curiously enough, though, the name Imogen was not exactly invented through this fortuitous misprint … at least, not entirely. For there was at least one Imogen before Shakespeare – indeed, five centuries before Shakespeare. In the eleventh century, Imogen was the name of a sister of Rivallon I of Dol, an ally of William the Conqueror during the Breton-Norman War.
Although Shakespeare may not have been ultimately responsible for the name, and his ‘Imogen’ was not the first to bear that name, it’s certainly true that the character in Cymbeline, who has become known by that name in most editions and productions of the play, is responsible for the popularity of the name Imogen ever since, at least in the English-speaking world.