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Herbert, William : (1580-1630), 3rd Earl of Pembroke, English patron of letters.

26 result/s found for Herbert, William

... in the Poetry and Art of William Blake, edited by Vivian de Sola Pinto (Gollancz, London), 1957. Eliot, T. S. Selected Poems - T. S. Eliot (Penguin Poets, Harmondsworth), 1948. Ezekiel Frye, Northrop "Blake After Two Centuries" in English Romantic Poets, Modern Essays in Criticism, edited by M. H. Abrams (New York), 1960. Grierson, Sir Herbert Milton and Wordsworth... Geoffrey Blake Studies (London), 1949. The Complete Writings of William Blake, Edited with all the variant readings (The Nonesuch Press, London), 1957. Lewis, C. S. A Preface to Paradise Lost (Oxford Paperbacks), 1960. McColley, C. "Milton's Battle in Heaven and Rupert of St. Herbert", Speculum, XVI, 1941. Paradise Lost (Chicago), 1940. Milton, John... Pondicherry), 1972. Bateson, F. W. Selected Poems of William Blake, Edited with an Introduction and Explanatory Notes (Heinemann, London), 1957. Blackstone, Bernard English Blake (Cambridge), 1949. Boehme Signatura Rerum and Other Discourses (Everyman's Library, London). Translation by William Law, first published in 4 Vols., 1764-1781. Bowra, E. M. ...

Amal Kiran   >   Books   >   Other-Works   >   Blake's Tyger

... Voids, Newtonian, 251 War in Heaven, 158-67,182-88,192-97 Wars of Eternity, 150,151 Wheels, of Heaven, Satanic, starry, 173,174,241,244,251 William Blake, 4 fn. 10,23 fn. 8,146 fn. 35 "William Blake and Modern Psychology", 141 fn. 8 Williamson, George, 41 Wickstead, Joseph H., 132,136 fn. 21 wings, 49,50,51,92,93-96,105,106, 120,224-26 ... "Ghost of a Flea, The", 5 Gnostics, 27,176 God, 147,148,175,228-30 Godwin, Jocelyn, 50 fn. 23 Gospel of John, The, 231 Gospel of Luke, The, 22 Grierson, Sir Herbert, 101 H, capital, 44,69 Habig, Marion A., 48 fn. 17 "hand or eye", 18,19,36,123 Hanford,J.N.,102 Harding, D.W., 2-3.7-8,24,30 "he", "him", 17-19,27,43,44,69.108, ... 116,119,121,126,127,175,190-91, 204,254,257,261,262-63,264 Milton and Wordsworth, 101 fn. 158 Milton Handbook, A, 102 fn. 161 "Milton's Battle in Heaven and Rupert of St. Herbert", 45 fn. 7 "Minute Particulars Organized", 6,43, 197,256 Monk,F.F.,23,24,30 Moon, 115 "mortal god", 27,170,177 Mythology, Blake's, 221 Nature, 168,170,184 Ne ...

Amal Kiran   >   Books   >   Other-Works   >   Blake's Tyger

... Lajpat 10 Rajagopalachari, C (Rajaji) 17,25 Rajnarain 40 Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, Sri 4       Ramayana 45, 56, 160, 330, 336, 341, 375,       418-420,445,447,458,461       Read, Herbert 267,306,383       Reddy,C.R.9,16,17       Richard, Paul 5,14       Richards, I.A. 410       Richardson, Dorothy M. 35       Richardson, Jack 268       Rishabhchand 20      ...       Bharati, Subramania 376       Bhartrihari 45       Bhasa 48,376       Bhavabhuti 376       Bhave, Vinoba 25       Bhawani Mandir 27,28       Blake, William 310,311,333,424,462       Boehme.Jacob 20,333,361       Boodin, John Elof 435,439,448,457       Bowra,C.M.375,380,383       Bradley, A.C. 425       Breul, Karl 426      ... 12,17,45 De Chardin, Pierre Teilhard 35-37 De Ruggiero, Guido 450           Dharma 11       Dickinson, Emily 314       Dowsett, Norman 18       Drewett, William H.6       Dryden, John 310,341       Dutt, Tom 253         Eliot, T.S. 44,198,267,272,314,389,391, 397,408,411,413,414,453       Emerson, R.W. 332       Erie ...

... Sri Aurobindo [ Kalidasa : Second Series (Pondicherry, 1954), pp. 13-14].   It may matter to the pedant or the gossip within me whether the sonnets were written to William Herbert or to Henry Wriothesley or to William Himself, whether the dark woman whom Shakespeare loved against his better judgment was Mary Fitton or someone else or nobody at all... but to the lover of poetry in me these... step-by-step argument, picking his way carefully but assuredly amidst a mass of conflicting evidence, by way of a precise identification. The 'fair youth', friend and patron and what not, is William Herbert, the Earl of Pembroke. Sethna sees in the Dark Lady, the other love of the 'two loves' in the Sonnets , a continental lady with the name he conjectures to be Anastasia Guglielma. Sethna would ...

... Sereny, Gitta: Albert Speer – His Battle with Truth Sereny, Gitta: The German Trauma Serpico, Joseph: Nuremberg Shirer, Quoted in William: The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich Shirer, William: The Nightmare Years 1930-1940 Shirer, William: The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich Sigmund, Anna Maria: Des Führers bester Freund Sigmund, Anna Maria: Die Frauen der Nazis I ... in den Nationalsozialismus Rose, Detlev: Die Thule-Gesellschaft – Legende, Mythos, Wirklichkeit Rosenbaum, Ron: Explaining Hitler – The Search for the Origins of His Evil Rosendorfer, Herbert: Deutsche Geschichte – Ein Versuch Ryback, Timothy W.: “Hitler’s Forgotten Library”, in The Atlantic Monthly, May 2003. Schellenberg, Walter: The Labyrinth Schnell, Ralf: Dichtung in ...

... in Sri Aurobindo's Philosophy (Sri Aurobindo Karyalaya, Anand, 1949).       Ray, Prithwis Chandra. Life and Times of C. R. Das (Oxford University Press, Bombay, 1927).       Read, Sri Herbert. Collected Essays in Literary Criticism (Faber & Faber, London, 1938).        Richards, LA. Coleridge on Imagination (Roudedge, London, 2 nd Edition, 1950).           Science and Poetry... (Kegan Paul, London, 1927).      Bullett, Gerald. The English Mystics (Michael Joseph, London, 1950). Page 486       Camoens, Luis Vas De. The Lusiads, translated by William Atkinson (Tenguin Books, London, 1952).       Cassirer, Ernst. Language and Myth, translated by Susanne K. Langer (Dover Publications Inc., New York, 1946).       Chardin, Pierre Teilhard... Paradise, translated by Henry Francis          Cary (Oxford University Press, London, 1923).       The Divine Comedy, translated by Charles Eliot Norton (Great Books of the Western World, William Benton, Chicago, 1952).      Das, Abinas Chandra. Rig-Vedic India, Vol. I (The University of Calcutta, 1921).       Deshmukh, P.S. The Origin and Development of Religion in Vedic Literature ...

... and the reason, the receiving and the selecting parts of him which are his truer self. It may matter to the pedant or the gossip within me whether the sonnets were written to William Herbert or to Henry Wriothesley or to William Himself, whether the dark woman whom Shakespeare loved against his better judgment was Mary Fitton or someone else or nobody at all, whether the language is that of hyperbolical ...

... book and again admire your skill in setting piece to piece, words, phrases, and reconstructing a complete picture, with recognizable human features. I am entirely convinced by your argument for William Herbert - in my garden you'll get two kinds of marjoram, sweet marjoram, and 'knotted marjoram' and of course you are absolutely right about the tight-curled hair! It would help if academics ever looked... so glad you have read most of it and find it skilful scholarship. I think my most solid contribution comes in the last part, which is concerned with "A Worthier Pen". If I have convinced you of William Herbert, it's surely something accomplished. You consider my "Anastasia" "rather a featureless young lady", but don't you believe it is some achievement to have given, if not "a local habitation", at least... enchanted Shakespeare - and the aristocratic Mr. W.H. - than a London adventuress - after all the Dark Lady was a gifted artist, and music clearly enchanted Shakespeare. As it doubtless did William Herbert. However I am not a Shakespeare scholar and all I am really saying is that an Italian player of the virginals at the court of Elizabeth strikes me as the Dark Lady I would invent if I were a f ...

... generally gives to intuition the role that Sri Aurobindo gives to the several overhead powers, but that the primary inspiration behind poetry (and art) is supra-rational is universally conceded. Thus, Herbert Read says:   All art originates in an act of intuition, or vision.. .The process of poetry consists firstly in maintaining this vision in its integrity, and secondly in expressing... tarn: "The words often would rush swiftly from hidden depths of consciousness Page 303 and be fashioned by an art with which the working brain had but little to do". 39 William S. Haas, again, makes the same point:       All original and creative ideas occur in a shock-like inspiration. And this is regardless of whether they belong to the religious, the ...

... and psychoanalysis 11-12 Being fullness of 62,63 individual and universal 60 inner 39,41,139 parts of 30,56 planes of 86 surface (outer) 17,41,138 Benson, Herbert 146 Bergson 6 Berne, Eric 52, 53 Breuer, Joseph 25 Buddha, the 96 Cannon, Walter B. 145, 146 Capra, Fritjof 49 Consciousness 18 and attitudes 118 ... 98-100 Inconscience (Inconscient) 8, 30 and the subconscient 8fn, 34 Indecision 95-96 Inner being see under Being Insanity 113 Introspection 17,57 James, William 24,117 Jung, Carl 7,9,23,29,38,53, 57,67, 111 on ego 19,111 and Freud 6,27-29 and Sri Aurobindo 7,9, 19, 41-42 and the unconscious 6,7, 26-27,28-29,41-42 ...

... Youth" by Shakespeareans but actually calledby the poet "fair friend" (104.1) — is, as many scholars have opined for reasons outside internal chronology and therefore inconclusively, Lord William Herbert who was born in 1580, became Third Earl of Pembroke in 1601 and is known to have been associated with both Shakespeare and his plays. 2. "The dark lady" is none of the candidates so... Neither can we assert that Shakespeare never wanted us to know who they were. The witty "Will-Sonnets (135. 136. 143) seem to disclose the names of both the poet and his Friend to be "William". In Sonnet 81 the poet tells the Friend: Your name from hence immortal life shall have, 16 Though I, once gone, to all the world must die: The earth can yield me but a ...

... specific spirit of prose as distinguished from poetry and yet not devoid of the essential poetic touch — the style perhaps which Sir Herbert Read6 in our own day recommends when he praises as the finest prose in the language the Centuries of that Restoration mystic, William Traherne. Thus only can a multi-shaded and individualistic tongue like English be rendered fully alive for the Indian turned creative ...

... Mother's consciousness, 748; on Mahasaraswati, 748-50; proliferation of influence, 752ff; E.F.F. Hill on, 752; Robert Bristow on, 752; advice to Government on the Indian French possessions, 754; Jean Herbert on, 760-1; Memorial Convention, 762ff; Shyamaprasad's tribute, 763; Mother on what he represents in world's history, 781; his "action", 781, 784; on the spiritual revolution, 784; admonition, 785;... seer, 512; Being and Becoming, 512; Heraclitean and Hindu thought, 512; relative standards and divine standard, 513; Fire as force and intelligence, 513; Heraclitus and divine Ananda, 514 Herbert, Jean, 760 Hero and the Nymph, The, 69, 70, 90, 94ff; Sri Aurobindo on Pururavas and Urvasie, 94; his handling of blank verse, 94ff; polychromatic rhapsody, 96ff; an Elizabethan play predating... of doom, 640 Penthesilea-Achilles motif, 64 1ff; role of the divinities, 642H; the women actors, 643; the intended conclusion, 643-4; similes, 644H; its metre, 645; the "unwomanly" woman, 646; Herbert Read on, 690 Imam, Syed Mehdi, 579 'Indian Majlis', 34, 37,183, 281 Indian Patriot, The, 244, 340 Indu Prakash, 55, 57, 59, 184ff, 188, 194, 206, 217, 218, 220, ...

... Religion, p. 232. 252 Ernst Hanfstängl, op. cit., pp. 115, 123. 253 William Shirer: The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, p. 81. 254 Christian von Krockow: Hitler und seine Deutschen, p. 98. 255 Christian Zentner: Adolf Hitlers ‘Mein Kampf’, p. 177. 256 Eberhard Jäckel: Hitlers Weltanschauung, p. 135. 257 William Shirer: The Nightmare Years 1930-1940, pp. 156-57. 258 Eberhard... Zentner, op. cit., p. 29. 436 André Pichot, op. cit., pp. 24, 353, 349. 437 Id., pp. 45-46. 438 William Shirer, op. cit., p. 103. 439 George Mosse, op. cit., pp. 93, 94. 440 Id., p. 94. 441 See Klaus von See, op. cit., p. 292. 442 George Mosse, op. cit., pp. 94 ff. passim. 443 William Shirer, op. cit., p. 107. 444 Id., p. 107. 445 Monologe im Führerhauptquartier, p. 150. ... 605. 1111 Id., p. 84. 1112 Id., p. 142. 1113 Id., pp. 82, 85, 154. 1114 Nirodbaran, op. cit., p. 709. 1115 William Shirer, op. cit., p. 613. 1116 Nirodbaran, op. cit., p. 713. 1117 John Toland: Adolf Hitler, pp. 833-34. 1118 Id., p. 835. 1119 William Shirer: The Nightmare Years, p. 535. 1120 Nirodbaran, op. cit., pp. 672, 674, 678. 1121 Id., pp. 680-81. 1122 Patrick ...

... remains a foreign instrument to convey the Indian spirit. She is in sympathy with Middleton Murry who feels that "Indian poets writing in English employ the words for uses they were never born for", and Herbert Read who feels that "poetry is of all things the most localised speech." But she will not condemn the Indians who opt for this dominant language. At the same time she cannot keep back the hobgoblins... studies on a variety of subjects, was editing a highly admired journal, Mother India and teaching English poetry to Indian students. He came in contact with Miss Raine because of his studies in William Blake and his Christological interpretation of Blake's Tyger. Kathleen Raine was already a big name in English writing by 1960.   Born on 14th June 1908 in Essex, Raine had a happy childhood... she was not writing as much as she should, she managed to publish more than a dozen books of poetry in the six decades of her active poetic career. Her spiritual inclinations drew her to a poet like William Blake and to India. She considered India to be a beautiful land, its people beautiful metaphorically and literally. This view of life no doubt inspired her to launch the magazine Temenos4 for she felt ...

... Robert Koons: Why Darwinism Fails to Inspire Confidence, pp. 21-22, in: Uncommon Dissent, William Dembski ed. × David Berlinski: The Deniable Darwin, p. 296, in: Uncommon Dissent, William Dembski ed. × ... Darwin against gradualism. Lyell and Gray stuck to their opinion that variations (the “minor individual differences”) were directed by providential influence rather than by ‘scientific’ chance. And Herbert Spencer “eagerly devoured Lamarck’s evolutionary theories and, interestingly enough, he never really wavered from them, remaining unconvinced by Darwin.” 30 Even Ernst Haeckel, the German scientist... animals. Its chief law will be “the law of the fittest”, and the result must be bellum omnium versus omnes, a war of all against all. This interpretation of the human social relations, initially by Herbert Spencer, became known as ‘social biology’; it would be the norm in the capitalist society as well as in international politics. If the fittest are the ones that survive, gain the upper hand and grow ...

... Perhaps the whole long poem contains narrative passages in whose absence there is a disproportion. I have not seen the poem for forty years, when I discussed it with Herbert Read. I note from the quotations from Aldous Huxley and Herbert Read that both wrote before having read the poem, and that Huxley's recommendation of Sri Aurobindo for the Nobel Prize was on the grounds of his-prose writings - The... Sherrard or somebody like him who is deeply conversant with Greek poetry both modern and ancient. Page 11 As you may recall from our old correspondence, it was about Ilion that Herbert Read wrote to A.B. Purani on June 5, 1958: "It is a remarkable achievement by any standard and I am full of amazement that someone not of English origin should have such a wonderful command not only... him remains viable at all times, so also the hexameter keeps calling for its Keats and Milton. Whether its call is truly answered or not has to be seen by an open-minded sympathetic approach such as Herbert Read has tried with Sri Aurobindo's Ilion, a work to which he has given, however briefly, superlative praise. Page 26 You appear to shirk plunging into the opening part of this poem ...

... Wordsworth. I mention it in order only to contradict the importance attached to it by some critics in connection with the sudden decline in Wordsworth's poetic powers a little past his middle age. Herbert Read is the chief exponent here, and he takes his cue from the fact that, although Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy did all they could to help Annette and the baby-girl, Wordsworth instead of marrying... tempers ran quite as high as on that fateful night in the Paris Theatre, and pretty deep cuts were made by the vigorous play of polemical pens. The central figure in the Romantic Movement in England was William Wordsworth, though Burns and Blake may be consi-dered the pioneers in a general sense. You might think Words-worth was rather a contrast to Hugo. We have been accustomed to picture him as a sedate ...

Amal Kiran   >   Books   >   Other-Works   >   Talks on Poetry

... reservations up to the very publication of the Origin , and never accepted Darwin’s gradualism. Asa Gray agreed with Darwin only within a framework which held that all species had been created over time. Herbert Spencer, propagandist of Darwinism, remained a Lamarckist at heart. And of Ernst Haeckel, “the German Darwin” and “universal promoter of Darwinism,” Larson writes: “Haeckel saw evolution proceeding... interested in the problem of evolution, which was then the topic among the intelligentsia thanks to Darwin’s Origin and the propaganda by his proponents in Britain (the X Club, Francis Galton and Herbert Spencer), France (Clémence Royer) and Germany (Ernst Haeckel). The Germany of those years was the most advanced industrial nation in the world, hard-working and of a dutiful accuracy in all its... its head, favoured by the fact that the “mechanism” of Darwinian evolution remained problematic. Among the major scientific problems bothering Darwin during his lifetime was the age of the Earth. William Thomson, later known as Lord Kelvin, “during most of his life widely thought of as the leading physicist and electrical engineer in the world,” still thought that the Sun’s energy was generated by ...

... unimaginable challenges.” 6 Eventually Bates would continue on his way up the Amazon, while Wallace chose to branch off on the Rio Negro, a majestic river in its own right. Later Alfred’s brother Herbert joined him, but did not prove strong enough to stand the ordeals of the tough and dangerous explorer’s life. He caught yellow fever and died in a Brazilian harbour town, about to board a ship to his... world against the traditional and orthodox belief that each kind of species was created separately by God in the beginning. Von Humboldt’s book having awakened the desire to visit the tropics, William Edward’s A Voyage Up the River Amazon suggested the destination, intensifying “an earnest desire to visit a tropical country, to behold the luxuriance of animal and vegetable life said to exist there... voyage around the world without taking any of them seriously; he was still a convinced creationist at the time, and very impressed by the arguments of natural theology, more specifically those of William Paley. Wallace had severed his ties with creationism earlier in life and was already in the tropical forests of the Amazon searching for facts that would support one evolutionary theory or the other ...

... Page 128 Do you intend reading Ilion further? If even steeping yourself in it doesn't change your view, I'll stop pleading my case and leave you standing at the other pole to Herbert Read's enthusiastic response. Now you may turn back to some older bones of contention - e.g., that Tagore poem on the answerless question. Also, if you feel like it, pronounce on my Mallarme... own feeling for Mallarme and the Symbolists, This at a time when in this country that dimension is as if non-existent for the academic critics as a whole, and there are remarkably few others around; Herbert Read was one of the last, and of course the poets themselves - Yeats and Eliot and Edwin Muir - were most perceptive critics. Materialism in the West has reached, one might hope, its nadir; but often... ultimately we do not have to turn away from earth for our fulfilment - a fulfilment always placed by earlier spirituality in a perfect Beyond where after terrestrial life we have to go. You, Tagore, William Blake one and all are of this supra-terrestrial outlook, no matter how much you may value sparrows and 'the eye of the peacock" and "our humble mother the dust" in the Creation which according to you ...

... myself) to fail to see it in a particular work. For as Shakespeare says, 'The best in this kind are but shadows, and the worst no worse, if but Imagination do amend them'. I cannot of course speak for Herbert Read or say what he thought or did not think; I can be answerable only for myself. So, to begin about the point Page 79 you make on your first page about the 'seer' and Aurobindo's... I am both charmed and encouraged by the picture you draw of your keeping for some days Won at your bedside. And the impression this poem has created on you verges on the One it made on Herbert Read. May I remind you of his pronouncement on this epic in quantitative hexameters? -"It is a remarkable achievement by any standard and 1 am full of amazement that someone not of English origin... poetic writing had gone before. Not only had Spenser, Marlowe, Shakespeare, Ben Jonson worked on English poetry; Chapman, Beaumont, Fletcher, Webster, Marston, Massinger, Shirley, Heywood, Donne, Herbert, Herrick, Campion - all these were born fairly before him. Abundant development had preceded him in prose also, starting with Bacon and Raleigh and culminating Page 101 in the Authorised ...

... partition was most reprehensible to the people immediately concerned and the voice of protest was raised vehemently against the scheme - that the matter was even raised in Parliament by a member, Herbert Roberts - he lay low for a while, then suddenly, having in the meantime secured the consent of the Secretary of State, he had the Partition Act passed by   Page 204 the Legislative Council... 'presidencies' were justifiable neither in terms of geography nor the imperatives of economics. They had grown, or rather fanned out, from the island of Bombay, the Fort St. George in Madras and Fort St. William in Calcutta. In the nineteenth century, the 'Bengal' administration had included present-day West Bengal and East Bengal (Bangla Desh), and Bihar (including Chota Nagpur), Assam and Orissa. Even when ...

... there reposed the sacred relics, sanctifying the surroundings and the great historic city itself. Writing on Sri Aurobindo and on the enshrinement of the relics at the Delhi Ashram, Professor Jean Herbert of the University of Geneva wrote: Even those most allergic to anything that smells of mysticism... must acknowledge Sri Aurobindo as one of the greatest men, not only of our age, but of... there were plans for a TV Programme. UNESCO had made a first contribution of 3,000 dollars to be used for a TV Project, and it as up to Auroville Page 777 to make the most of it. William T. Netter, in his report published in Mother India (December 1969), made the point that in India art experience had always been: "seen in the light of a greater reality". If for the Communist leader ...

... appeal to the whole Christendom of his day. As Rajan 157 puts the situation: "To say that the epic is consistent with Milton's heterodox theology is very different from saying that it implies it." Sir Herbert Grierson 158 has reached the conclusion: "... Milton's Arianism which is fully developed in the 'De Doctrina' is not so clearly adumbrated in the poem." Rajan 159 has tried to prove that the poem... 140. 2. Cf. S. Foster Damon: "...the works of Milton influenced Blake more than any other book except the Bible" ("Blake and Milton" in The Divine Vision, Studies in the Poetry and Art of William Blake, edited by Vivian de Sola Pinto [London], 1957, p. 95). Also Northrop Frye: "Blake...was brought upon the Bible and on Milton" ("Blake After Two Centuries", op. cit., p. 62). Page 53 ...

Amal Kiran   >   Books   >   Other-Works   >   Blake's Tyger

... with 'shaping of mind' by almost all schools of thought. This is also reflected in the report to UNESCO by International Commission on Education for the 21 st Century. The post-Marxian philosopher Herbert Marcuse's famous book, 'One Dimensional Man' propounds the same thesis, be it in socialist or a capitalist society mind is shaped to become one-dimensional although Marcusian thesis has larger ramification... SURPRISES—Joan E. Cass 53.THAT INATTENTIVE BOY 54.ORPHEUS AND EURYDICE—A Greek Legend 55.MY BROTHER, MY BROTHER—Norah Burke 56.THE LAST LEAF—O. Henry 57.THE LITTLE BLACK BOY—William Blake 58.NO TIME FOR FEAR—Philip Yancey 59.MY STRUGGLE FOR AN EDUCATION—Booker T. Washington 60.THE POSTMASTER—Rabindra Nath Tagore STORIES FROM THE WEST 1.THE GHOST ...