A modern spelling of Heartley preserving the deer-meadow image while adopting a softer feminine given-name style.
Heartly draws its energy from two converging sources: the English surname Hartley, and the evocative common word "heartily," which has carried connotations of warmth, enthusiasm, and sincerity since the Middle Ages. Hartley as a place name and surname derives from the Old English *heort* (hart, a male deer) and *lēah* (a woodland clearing or meadow) — the stag's clearing, a sylvan image of wild grace meeting open ground. The shift from Hartley to Heartly moves the name toward the heart itself, the emotional center, giving it a warmth that the surname form does not carry quite as directly.
P. Hartley (1895–1972), the English novelist best remembered for *The Go-Between* (1953) and its celebrated opening line — "The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there." These intellectual and literary associations lend unexpected depth to a name that reads on its surface as warmly invented.
As a given name, Heartly is genuinely rare, sitting at the intersection of the surname-as-first-name trend and the affective naming tradition that has produced names like Truly, Lovely, and Gracely. It wears its warmth without sentimentality, suggesting someone direct and earnest — heartily present in the world.