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George Robert Stowe Mead, for many years General Secretary of the European Section, was born in 1863. His father was Col. R. Mead, late deputy Commissioner Her Majesty's Ordnance. He was educated at King's School, Rochester, and won honors at St. John's College and at Cambridge. After three years of teaching, he entered Oxford as an undergraduate, determined upon a fellowship in philosophy. After five months hard study, he went to Clermont Ferrand, in France, where he attended lectures for six months. Previous to leavint England he had met [[Bertram Keightley|Mr. Bertram Keightley]] and [[Mohini Mohun Chatterji|Mohini]], and had come in touch with [[Theosophy]]. In 1887, he met [[Helena Petrovna Blavatsky|H. P. B.]] for the first time at Norwood, and two years later, he gave up all else that he might devote his life and energies entirely to the work of the [[Theosophical Society]]. He is well known to all the members through his articles in the [[The Theosophical Review (periodical)|''Theosophical Review'']], of which he is coeditor with[[Annie Besant|Mrs. Besant]], and his books, ''Orpheus'', ''Plotinus'', ''Simon Magus'', ''Pistis Sophia'', ''The World Mystery'', and last (but decidedly not least) ''Fragments of a Faith Forgotten'', which has just come form the press. The pressure of his literary work becoming great, Mr. Mead resigned from the office of General Secretary two or more years ago.<ref>"Some of Our Friends",''The Theosophic Messenger'' 2.2 (November 1900), 32.</ref>
George Robert Stowe Mead, for many years General Secretary of the European Section, was born in 1863. His father was Col. R. Mead, late deputy Commissioner Her Majesty's Ordnance. He was educated at King's School, Rochester, and won honors at St. John's College and at Cambridge. After three years of teaching, he entered Oxford as an undergraduate, determined upon a fellowship in philosophy. After five months hard study, he went to Clermont Ferrand, in France, where he attended lectures for six months. Previous to leavint England he had met [[Bertram Keightley|Mr. Bertram Keightley]] and [[Mohini Mohun Chatterji|Mohini]], and had come in touch with [[Theosophy]]. In 1887, he met [[Helena Petrovna Blavatsky|H. P. B.]] for the first time at Norwood, and two years later, he gave up all else that he might devote his life and energies entirely to the work of the [[Theosophical Society]]. He is well known to all the members through his articles in the [[The Theosophical Review (periodical)|''Theosophical Review'']], of which he is coeditor with[[Annie Besant|Mrs. Besant]], and his books, ''Orpheus'', ''Plotinus'', ''Simon Magus'', ''Pistis Sophia'', ''The World Mystery'', and last (but decidedly not least) ''Fragments of a Faith Forgotten'', which has just come form the press. The pressure of his literary work becoming great, Mr. Mead resigned from the office of General Secretary two or more years ago.<ref>"Some of Our Friends",''The Theosophic Messenger'' 2.2 (November 1900), 28.</ref>
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Revision as of 16:02, 12 February 2014

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James Morgan Pryse, H. P. Blavatksy, and G. R. S. Mead

George Robert Stowe Mead was an English Theosophist who worked with Helena Petrovna Blavatsky.

George Robert Stowe Mead, for many years General Secretary of the European Section, was born in 1863. His father was Col. R. Mead, late deputy Commissioner Her Majesty's Ordnance. He was educated at King's School, Rochester, and won honors at St. John's College and at Cambridge. After three years of teaching, he entered Oxford as an undergraduate, determined upon a fellowship in philosophy. After five months hard study, he went to Clermont Ferrand, in France, where he attended lectures for six months. Previous to leavint England he had met Mr. Bertram Keightley and Mohini, and had come in touch with Theosophy. In 1887, he met H. P. B. for the first time at Norwood, and two years later, he gave up all else that he might devote his life and energies entirely to the work of the Theosophical Society. He is well known to all the members through his articles in the Theosophical Review, of which he is coeditor withMrs. Besant, and his books, Orpheus, Plotinus, Simon Magus, Pistis Sophia, The World Mystery, and last (but decidedly not least) Fragments of a Faith Forgotten, which has just come form the press. The pressure of his literary work becoming great, Mr. Mead resigned from the office of General Secretary two or more years ago.[1]

Notes

  1. "Some of Our Friends",The Theosophic Messenger 2.2 (November 1900), 28.