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In reply to the discussion: Shakespeare and Myths About Genius [View all]GreatGazoo
(4,077 posts)37. Yes - Blankenship was an inspiration but
>The surname Finn has several origins. In some cases it is derived from the Irish Ó Finn, meaning "descendant of Fionn"; the byname means "white" or "fair-haired". In other cases it is derived from the Old Norse Finnr, a personal name sometimes derived from a byname, or else from compound names beginning with this word element. In other cases Finn is a German surname derived from an ethnic name referring to people from Finland.< -Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finn_(surname)
My point was only that the character name Huckleberry Finn is the most popular use of the name in American literature and that it plays on 19th century stereotypes about Finlanders.
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Huckleberry Finn had nothing to do with Finnish people. Finn is a Irish-derived name and Twain stated the inspiration
Celerity
Jan 5
#35
FWIW, everyone agrees it's the Irish origin. It came from a real "Jimmy Finn"
muriel_volestrangler
Jan 5
#41
I had heard about Patrick Stewart's Shakespeare roles but had not seen any clips
GreatGazoo
Jan 3
#17
Having never read Mucedorus (but I will now) here is my analysis. Apologies for the length.
C0RI0LANUS
Jan 3
#25
You're welcome-- it won't take long. The version I read has Mucedorus using a club to kill Bremo with one blow.
C0RI0LANUS
Jan 5
#43