All my life I have been battling with the problem of whether to pronounce my surname with an “ow” (as in trowel); or with an “oh” (as in “troll”). Powell or Pole, that is the question. So many assumptions about class and politics ride on that single syllable. As discussions rage about what Margaret Thatcher would make of David Cameron’s EU renegotiations, we are reminded that even brothers do not always agree. Charles Powell, Thatcher’s foreign policy adviser, is firmly in the “oh” camp. But his brother Jonathan, Tony Blair’s first chief of staff, is an “ow” man.
My grandfather, the novelist Anthony Powell, was very much a Pole. So much so, in fact, that if I choose to introduce myself as Georgia “Pole”, I am usually asked if I’m “any relation to Anthony?” Yes, I reply, hence, of course, my confident trilling of “Pole” — a correct and ancient pronunciation of a name which can be traced back, according to my grandfather, to the early kings and princes of Wales. However, the entire Powell versus Pole debate must seem like some kind of ridiculous snobbery. Yet I’m not sure that is the case.
General Colin Powell pronounced the “ow” in his surname and then confounded us all with “Cole-in”. There is some pleasure to be had in having a “difficult” surname. And there’s definitely a pleasure to be had in knowing how to pronounce a surname correctly.
In my case the truth is that, like the late David Bowie (pron Boe-ie?), I really don’t know how to say my name. I am particularly pathetic when it comes to introducing myself on the telephone. I mutter a feeble mixture of both versions and often end up with people thinking that I’m the far more exotic “Georgia Pearl”, which sounds as if I’m from one of America’s southern states. Sometimes I refuse to say it at all and simply spell it out, leaving my listener to choose their own pronunciation.
It’s not snobbery that makes me persist with “Pole”. Rather, I have a certain attachment to my grandfather’s pronunciation of the name and I’m unwilling to relinquish it. But I’m not wholly convinced by his Welsh history. True, there is an old Welsh fairy tale that refers to the King of Fairyland and father of the clan of Powell being called Pwyle. But I’m afraid I find myself pronouncing his name as “Pile”.
All in all, I wouldn’t be surprised if future Powells do not burden themselves with the multiple variants, and opt instead for the uncomplicated “ow” sound. That has long been my brother’s tactic and I envy him. My father, meanwhile, has mastered a subtle “Poe?well”, which seems to satisfy everyone. But my poor children will suffer an even worse fate than I have had. Their father’s surname is Coke — pronounced Cook, obviously.