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         Herbert George:     more books (101)
  1. Philosophy of the Act (Works of George Herbert Mead Volume 3) by George Herbert Mead, 1972-11-30
  2. Twelve Stories and a Dream by H. G. (Herbert George) Wells, 2009-10-04
  3. The English Poems of George Herbert by George Herbert, 2007-10-22
  4. The Life of Herbert Hoover: The Engineer 1874-1914 (Life of Herbert Hoover, Vol. 1) by George H. Nash, 1983-04
  5. George Herbert Mead and Human Conduct by Herbert Blumer, 2004-02
  6. George Allen's Guide to Special Teams by George Herbert Allen, Joseph G. Pacelli, 1990-01
  7. George Herbert Walker Bush: A Penguin Life (Penguin Lives) by Tom Wicker, 2004-05-03
  8. Pilgrims Progress; The Lives Of John Donne And George Herbert (1909) by John Bunyan, Izaak Walton, 2007-11-10
  9. The nature of goodness by George Herbert Palmer, 2010-08-29
  10. The Pilgrim's Progress By John Bunyan - The Lives of John Donne and George Herbert By Izaak Walton (Harvard Classics - Deluxe Edition) by John Bunyan, Izaak Walton, 1969
  11. Country Parson by George Herbert, 2009-12-21
  12. Little Wars; a game for boys from twelve years of age to one hundred and fifty and for that more intelligent sort of girl who likes boys' games and books. by H. G. (Herbert George) Wells, 2010-07-06
  13. Power and Culture: Essays on the American Working Class by Herbert George Gutman, 1992-06-01
  14. George Herbert and Henry Vaughan (Oxford Authors) by George Herbert, Henry Vaughan, 1986-07-24

41. George Herbert Mead Discussion List
george herbert Mead Discussion List, hosted at the University of South Carolina.
http://people.cas.sc.edu/burket/g-h-mead.html
George
Herbert
Mead
Discussion
List G-H-MEAD is an international electronic forum devoted to the interpretation and extension of George Herbert Mead's philosophy and social psychology. The list is open to anyone with an interest in any facet of Mead's work. The broad aims of the list are to explore the merits of Mead's work, including its relations to any and all developments in philosophy and the social sciences at large. Members of the forum are expected to strive for the spirit of cooperative inquiry. This does not mean suppressing disagreements. It does mean avoiding personal attacks, uncharitable interpretations of members' arguments, and so forth and so on. To subscribe to the G.H.Mead email discussion list (it's free!), send a message from your usual email address to listserv@listserv.sc.edu with a one-line command
subscribe g-h-mead Your Name
as the body of the message (with your name in place of "Your Name"). You will be asked to confirm the subscription, and then you'll receive a couple of messages with more information about how the list works. As a new member, feel free to introduce yourself, perhaps with a brief statement of what you might like to discuss with others on the list.

42. Three Poems Inspired By George Herbert Vikram Seth TLS
Three poems inspired by george herbert Vikram Seth TLS.
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/the_tls/articl
DM_addToLoc("Network",escape("Times")); DM_addToLoc("SiteName",escape("Times Online")); // Article page for Revenue sciences> DM_addToLoc("TemplateName",escape("Article")); DM_addToLoc("ArticleName",escape("Three poems inspired by George Herbert")); var viewSectionName = "The TLS"; DM_addToLoc("SectionName1",escape(viewSectionName)); var sectionPath = "/Home"; var pat = / /g; var sectionName = "the_tls"; sectionPath = sectionPath + "/" + "arts_and_entertainment/the_tls";
Simply The Best
This weekend Clarkson reveals the best 25 cars
Navigation - link to other main sections from here
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We should once again stigmatise fat people
Rod Liddle Send your views Sponsored by Where am I? Home From The Times Literary Supplement January 9, 2008
Three poems inspired by George Herbert
Vikram Seth, returning to poetry after some years, draws inspiration from living in the house once occupied by the great poet and Anglican priest
Vikram Seth Host
To see the old house where
He lived three years, and died. How could I know

43. Welcome To The American Presidency
Bush, george herbert Walker (1924 ), 41st president of the United States. During most of his public career, george Bush served other presidents loyally in
http://ap.grolier.com/article?assetid=0068080-00

44. EpistemeLinks: Website Results For Philosopher George Herbert Mead
General website search results for george herbert Mead including brief biographies, link resources, and more. Provided by EpistemeLinks.
http://www.epistemelinks.com/Main/Philosophers.aspx?PhilCode=Mead

45. Robert Throop And Lloyd Gordon Ward: Mead Project 2.0
We were always fond of the name george s Page. Luther Lee Bernard and Jacob Robert Kantor will follow, then Louis Thurstone and herbert Blumer.
http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/
A Mead Project
reference page
Originally published as:
Robert Throop and Lloyd Gordon Ward. "Mead Project 2.0." Toronto: The Mead Project (2007).
Editors' notes
A brief introduction to the October 2007 revision.
Site Navigation
the Web Mead Project n1= 'lward' n2= 'rthroop' a1= 'b2b2c.ca' a2="brocku.ca" stub1='' at = '@' cc = '?cc=' add = 'email us' document.write(stub1+add)
Mead Project 2.0
Welcome to the October 2007 edition of the Mead Project. We would like to thank everyone who complained about the look and feel of the old site over the past year or so. We wanted to ignore you, but your criticisms were valid. Except for minor (and usually ill-considered) cosmetic changes, nothing had really changed since we first mounted the site more than a decade ago. That meant that we had not taken advantage of developments in Web technologies since the mid-1990s. So we spent a few days learning about cascading style sheets and "code validators," and invested most of the summer in the redesign and reconstruction of the site, bringing it up to W3C's standards, cleaning out more than 300,000 compliance issues and errors — tedious work but we hope that you think it was worth the effort. Most of the site has been tested against three of the "big four:" Internet Explorer™ Firefox™ and Opera.™ We are still testing Safari.™ We are a little PC-centric and didn't know that Apple had a Window's version of the browser until mid-October.But once again, if you have problems, let us know.

46. Works Of George Herbert On Project Canterbury
Dean Church, from the English Churchman s Library, 1905 presented online through Project Canterbury.
http://anglicanhistory.org/herbert/index.html
Project Canterbury George Herbert
A Priest to the Temple, Or, The Country Parson
[1652 edition, original spelling; full text] Because of the large size of the file above, I have also broken the text into parts, as below
Chapters 1-10

Chapters 11-20

Chapters 21-30

Chapters 31-Concluding Material
... Project Canterbury

47. USA: Biography Of George Herbert Walker Bush (1924-)
USAproject, presidents-area, biographical data of george herbert Walker Bush.
http://www.let.rug.nl/usa/P/gb41/about/bush.htm
FRtR Presidents George Herbert Walker Bush Biography
George Herbert Walker Bush (1924-)
Biography
Quote America's 41st President, George Bush, was born on June 12, 1924, in Milton, Massachusetts, into a wealthy family as George Herbert Walker Bush. After graduating from Phillips Academy, Andover, MA in 1942 he served as the youngest U.S. naval carrier pilot in the Pacific till 1945, winning the 'Distinguished Flying Cross', and three Air Medals. On January 6, 1945 George married Barbara Pierce, of Rye, New York. Bush studied economics at Yale University. After graduating he moved to Texas where he started working in the oil-drilling business. He co-founded the Bush-Overbey Company, Zapata Petroleum Corporation and Zapata Off-Shore, of which he also became president in 1954. In 1966 he sold his interests to concentrate on politics. He became active in the Republican Party. After running unsuccesfully as a Republican candidate for the Senate in 1964, he entered the House of Representatives in 1967. This was the beginning of an extensive political career. Bush served as ambassador to the United Nations from 1971-1972, was chairman of the Republican National Committee from 1972-1973, chief of the U.S. liaison office in Peking from 1974-1976, and director of the C.I.A. from 1976-1977. In 1980 Bush campaigned for the Republican nomination for the U.S. presidency but withdrew later to support Reagan, who chose Bush as his running mate. Bush became vice-president during Reagan's two terms in the White House, from 1981-1989. In 1988 Bush ran for the presidency again and this time succesfully.

48. George Herbert
Search for herbert, george as author and The Temple as titleyou ll get a few weird hits for an Egyptology text, but all the others are individual
http://faculty.goucher.edu/eng211/george_herbert.htm
George Herbert, The Temple Genre: sacred lyric collection imitating the architectural structure of a church while tracing the story of the persona's struggle with faith. Form: extraordinary metrical experiments, including "shaped poems," the most famous of which are "The Altar" and "Easter Wings." The book as a whole also has the form of a spiritual autobiography in lyrics, sacralizing the sonnet cycle's obsessive narration of the Lover-Beloved relationship and redirecting its interest in philosophy to the limitations of will-directed reason and the power of faith to command the believer. Characters: Herbert's persona is almost indistinguishable from his historical one, except that some of these poetic situations clearly are fanciful, and the personae of "Love," "God," "heart," arise from the medieval allegorical tradition but transcend it by means of Herbert's dexterous and surprising ability to make them psychological forces as well as metaphysical phenomena. Summary: Herbert's struggle tends to reflect his personal ambitions for a worldly life which were set against the demands of his rural parsonage at Bemerton. His ambition raised him from the fifth son of a dead Welch father to a member of Parliament and of the faculty of Cambridge. But the death of patrons led him to reconsider his objectives, and his last 3 years he lived as a poor country parson and wrote all the poems in

49. RPO -- Selected Poetry Of George Herbert (1593-1633)
herbert s poems were first published shortly after his death, in The Temple, Sacred Poems and Private Ejaculations by Mr. george herbert, 1633.
http://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/poet/159.html
Poet Index Poem Index Random Search ... Concordance document.writeln(divStyle)
Selected Poetry of George Herbert (1593-1633)
from Representative Poetry On-line
Prepared by members of the Department of English at the University of Toronto
from 1912 to the present and published by the University of Toronto Press from 1912 to 1967.
RPO Edited by Ian Lancashire
A UTEL (University of Toronto English Library) Edition
Published by the Web Development Group, Information Technology Services, University of Toronto Libraries
Index to poems
Nothing hath got so far
But man hath caught and kept it as his prey
(Man, 19-20)
  • Aaron
  • The Affliction (I)
  • The Altar
  • The British Church ...
  • Virtue
    Notes on Life and Works
    Herbert's poems were first published shortly after his death, in The Temple, Sacred Poems and Private Ejaculations by Mr. George Herbert , 1633. Some of them had already circulated in MS. His poems are so full of biblical echoes or quotations, and his images so often liturgical, that only full annotation (rather than mere reference) can properly bring out his indebtedness.
    Biographical information
    Given name : George
    Family name : Herbert
    Birth date : 3 April 1593
    Death date : March 1633 Nationality : English Family relations father: Richard Herbert mother: Magdalen Herbert wife: Jane Herbert (from 5 March 1628) brother: Edward Herbert brother: Henry Herbert brother: Thomas Herbert Languages English Latin Greek Education Westminster School: 1604 to 1609
  • 50. Mead, George Herbert
    Provides a collection of articles and a power point presentation.
    http://www.bolender.com/Sociological Theory/Mead, George Herbert/mead,_george_he
    George Herbert Mead Read each of the following items.
    George Herbert Mead
    The Person
    George Herbert Mead Was born at South Hadley, Massachusetts, on February 27, 1863. His father, Hiram Mead, Was a minister who descended from a long line of New England Puritan farmers and clergymen. His mother, Elizabeth Storrs Billings, like her husband, came from a family background in which intellectual achievement had been highly valued When Mead was seven, his father was called to Oberlin College to take the chair of homiletics (the art of preaching) at the newly founded theological seminary. Mead grew up at Oberlin and went to college there. Although he was to revolt against its pious atmosphere, he was decisively influenced by the mixture of New England Puritan ethics and Midwestern progressive ideas that dominated the college. Oberlin was founded in 1833 by a militant Congregationalist reformer, the Reverend John Jay Shipherd. Its first president, Asa Mahan, preached a some- what attenuated form of the perfectionist doctrine that later came to full flowering in the communal and sexual experiments of John Humphrey Noyes' Oneida utopian community. Oberlin was one of the first American colleges to admit Negroes and, in 1841, it became the first coeducational college to grant a bachelor's degree to women. In the years preceding the Civil War, Oberlin was one of the chief stations on the Underground Railroad that helped thou- sands of Southern Negro slaves escape to the North and to Canada. Another major social cause, that of temperance, also owes much to Oberlin. The Anti- Saloon League originated there.

    51. George Herbert: The Altar
    It has been said that george herbert s poems are actually a record of his private devotional life. Thus the altar metaphor should provide insight to his
    http://www.thingsrevealed.net/altar1.htm
    The Altar by George Herbert The Altar A broken ALTAR, Lord thy servant rears,
    Made of a heart, and cemented with teares:
    Whose parts are as thy hand did frame;
    No workmans tool hath touch'd the same
    A HEART alone
    Is such a stone,
    As nothing but
    Thy pow'r doth cut.
    Wherefore each part
    Of my hard heart
    Meets in this frame, To praise thy Name: That if I chance to hold my peace, These stones to praise thee may not cease. O let thy blessed SACRIFICE be mine, And sanctifie this ALTAR to be thine. This poem falls in the category called "shape poems" since it's shape echo's the meaning of the verse. It has been noted that it was only eighty years after Herbert's composition that Joseph Addison made the judgment that such a shape poem was "garish and silly." Yet Herbert was a man of an earlier century and really another era. Up until the sixteenth century the western European view of the world was characterized by what Michel Foucault has called the "doctrine of signatures" described below: Up to the end of the sixteenth century, resemblance played a constructive role in the knowledge of Western culture. It was resemblance that largely guided exegesis and the interpretation of texts; it was resemblance that organized the play of symbols, made possible knowledge of things visible and invisible, and controlled the art of representing them. (Michel Foucault, The Order of Things, p. 17, (New York: Vintage Books, 1970))

    52. George H. Mead -- Philosophy Books And Online Resources
    The project is dedicated to facilitating Mead scholarship through republication of the work of george herbert Mead. george s Page is still under
    http://erraticimpact.com/~american/html/mead.htm

    American Index

    New Book Search

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    George H. Mead
    Texts: George H. Mead Used Books: Mead Know of a Resource?
    George's Page
    George's Page is the official publication of the Mead Project at Brock University's Department of Sociology, in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. The project is dedicated to facilitating Mead scholarship through republication of the work of George Herbert Mead.
    Mind, Self, and Society
    From: From George Herbert Mead, Mind, Self, and Society . Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1934.
    Includes a list of posthumously published works. History Names Subjects CFP ... Add URL A service for the online network of worldwide philosophers erraticimpact.com

    53. CNN Cold War - Profile: George Herbert Walker Bush
    george herbert Walker Bush. Son of an investment banker and U.S. senator from Connecticut, george Bush was born on June 12, 1924 in Milton, Massachusetts,
    http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cold.war/kbank/profiles/bush/
    This site is best viewed with
    a 4.0 browser and requires javascript
    Son of an investment banker and U.S. senator from Connecticut, George Bush was born on June 12, 1924 in Milton, Massachusetts, grew up in Greenwich, Connecticut, and attended the exclusive Philips Andover Academy. During World War II, he served as a naval pilot, winning the Distinguished Flying Cross. After the war he attended Yale, graduating in 1948 with a degree in economics. Bush next moved to Texas and, helped financially by his family, went into the oil field supply business to make his own fortune. He succeeded and next turned his attention to politics. He ran a losing campaign for the U.S. Senate in 1964, but two years later gained election to the House of Representatives. During his second term, he again ran for the Senate, again losing. In 1971 President Nixon nominated Bush to serve as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. In 1973, as the Watergate scandal began to dominate the headlines, Bush left the United Nations to become chairman of the Republican National Committee. Nixon's successor, President Gerald Ford, named Bush the head of the U.S. liaison office in China in September 1974. The following year he returned to Washington to lead the CIA. Bush announced his candidacy for the White House in 1979 and during the campaign of 1980 was the closest competitor to eventual Republican nominee Ronald Reagan. Bush accepted Reagan's offer of the vice presidency. In 1988 he easily beat Democrat Michael Dukakis for the presidency.

    54. Obituaries And Death Notices From The Boston Globe - Boston.com
    Born in Attleboro, MA. on 9/16/1941 of Ruth (Donly) and george herbert Beard II. Grew up in Wrentham, MA. Graduate of King Philip Regional High School in
    http://www.legacy.com/bostonglobe/DeathNotices.asp?Page=Lifestory&PersonId=99573

    55. Mead, George Herbert
    Glossary of Religion and Philosophy Short Biography of george herbert Mead.
    http://atheism.about.com/library/glossary/general/bldef_meadgeorgeherbert.htm
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') You are here: About Agnosticism / Atheism Agnosticism / Atheism Atheism ... Help George Herbert Mead Back to Last Page Glossary Index Related Terms Pragmatism Name:
    George Herbert Mead Dates:
    Born: February 27, 1863 in South Hadley, Massachusetts
    Died: April 26, 1931 in Chicago, Illinois Specialization
    Pragmatism
    Social Psychology Major Works
    The Philosophy of the Present (1931)
    Mind, Self and Society from the Standpoint of a Social Behaviorist (1934)
    The Philosophy of Act (1938) Biography:
    George Herbert Mead is considered one of America's most important and leading exponents of Pragmatism, but it is in the field of Social Psychology where he left his most enduring and well-known marks. As a social behaviorist, Mead believed that it was possible to explain all of human behavior as a product of our social interactions and social contexts. For example, Mead argued that language was inherently social in nature. This meant not simply that it was used socially, but that its existence and the meanings it conveys are based fundamentally upon the social contexts in which individual humans and the human species as a whole have developed. Mead also argued that the human sense of "self" is necessarily social in nature because we develop our selfhood through social processes and social interactions. Also Known As: none Alternate Spellings: none Common Misspellings: none Related Resources: Biographies of Philosophers
    This index of biographical index of famous philosophers throughout history includes many others who have contributed to our understanding of human nature and life - including sociologists, psychologists, scientists, and more.

    56. George Herbert Leigh Mallory
    george herbert Leigh Mallory. mallory. (1886–1924). george Mallory, the only veteran of all three 1920s expeditions, on which he was universally considered
    http://imagingeverest.rgs.org/Units/53.html
    THE ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY (WITH IBG) George Herbert Leigh Mallory George Mallory, the only veteran of all three 1920s expeditions, on which he was universally considered to be the finest climber, vanished with Irvine en route to the summit of Everest on June 8, 1924. Biographies
    Site created by Librios CMS

    57. George Herbert Walker Bush - SourceWatch
    george herbert Walker Bush, the 41st President of the United States, was born on June 12, 1924, in Milton, Massachusetts. Photo from National Archives.
    http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=George_Herbert_Walker_Bush

    58. GeorgeHerbertWalkerBush.net - How "Poppy" Bush Sr. Sold The Bombing Of Iraq
    george herbert Walker Bush To occupy Iraq would instantly shatter our coalition, turning the whole Arab world against us
    http://www.georgeherbertwalkerbush.net/
    GeorgeHerbert
    WalkerBush.net Biography Links GeorgeWalkerBush.net CarlyleGroup.net Assassinations.net John-F-Kennedy.net ... Suggest a Site
    Feature Articles The Attempted Coup D'Etat Of March 30, 1981
    by Webster G. Tarpley and Anton Chaitkin

    The Attempted Assassination Of

    Ronald Reagan
    ...
    Link Confirmed

    by John Buchanan
    Bush-Nazi Dealings Continued Until 1951

    by John Buchanan
    The Bush Family Funded Hitler
    Chickenhawks The New Hampshire Gazette None Dare Call ... George Herbert Walker Bush "To occupy Iraq would instantly shatter our coalition, turning the whole Arab world against us and make a broken tyrant into a latter-day hero ... assigning young soldiers to a fruitless hunt for a securely entrenched dictator and condemning them to fight in what would be an un-winnable urban guerilla war.

    59. Type_Document_Title_here
    george herbert came fifth among the seven sons. He was a private man, whereas the others lived much in the world. There were girls in the family,
    http://www.geocities.com/magdamun/herbertspoetry.html
    George Herbert's Poetry
    Critic: Russell Fraser
    Source: "George Herbert's Poetry," in The Sewanee Review , Vol. XCV, No. 4, Fall, 1987, pp. 560-85.
    Criticism about: "Holy Scriptures I"; "The Pearl"; The Temple ; "Paradise"; "Affliction"; "Home"; "The Collar"; "The Flower"; "Virtue"; "Providence"
    Author Covered: George Herbert (1593-1633)

    Table of Contents
    Essay
    Source Citation [In the essay below, Fraser provides an overview of Herbert's life and work.]
    Among makers of the short poem in English Herbert's peers are Yeats, Frost, Donne and Jonson, and Shakespeare at sonnets. Keats belongs in this company but left a smaller body of permanent poetry. Donne, notorious for his difficulty, gives less trouble than Herbert. Once you get past the hermetic syntax and the recondite learning, most of it easily elucidated by footnotes, all you need is to read him with the right intonation. Yeats has his private system, obtrusive in a few poems, for example "Byzantium" and "Ego Dominus Tuus." Mostly, however, the system is absorbed in the poems, and this poet, handled with the care he merits, is plain sailing. Shakespeare, offering insistently the negative of his positive, is the poet who comes closest to Herbert. Like a fabulous beast that ate its own paws without knowing it, Renan said, assessing Shakespeare. This is Herbert too. In his "Holy Scriptures I," for instance, where the "idea" is that Scripture is the sum of perfection. Devout readers take strength from this, and meaning to strengthen them Herbert writes his poem. A Christian poet whatever else, he isn't out to fool us. But like certain of Shakespeare's sonnets the poem includes a counterstatement, disputing its paraphrasable content. This skeptical-irreverent poem doesn't cancel the panegyric, though, and that makes Herbert one of a kind, even among poets who like to have it both ways.

    60. 3quarksdaily
    Three Poems Inspired by george herbert, by Vikram Seth. Vikram Seth, author of the lyrical feast Golden Gate, gives us some monosyllabic poems inspired by
    http://3quarksdaily.blogs.com/3quarksdaily/2008/01/three-poems-ins.html
    ABOUT US ARCHIVES LINKS RSS ... MONDAY COLUMNS
    An Eclectic Digest of Science, Art and Literature Main
    January 18, 2008
    Three Poems Inspired by George Herbert, by Vikram Seth
    Vikram Seth , author of the lyrical feast Golden Gate, gives us some monosyllabic poems inspired by George Herbert and tells of the source of the inspiration (via Amitava Kumar Host I heard it was for sale and thought I’d go
    To see the old house where
    He lived three years, and died. How could I know
    Its stones, its trees, its air,
    The stream, the small church, the dark rain would say:
    “You’ve come; you’ve seen; now stay.” “A guest?” I asked. “Yes, as you are on earth.”
    “The means?” “. . . will come, don’t fear.”
    “What of the risk?” “Our lives are that from birth.”
    “His ghost?” “His soul is here.”
    “He’ll change my style.” “Well, but you could do worse
    Than rent his rooms of verse.” Joy came, and grief; love came, and loss; three years – Tiles down; moles up; drought; flood. Though far in time and faith, I share his tears, His hearth, his ground, his mud;

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