People
- Alan Hurst (cricketer)
- Alan Hurst (politician), British politician
- Brian Desmond Hurst, an Irish film director
- Bruce Hurst, a former Major League Baseball pitcher
- Charles Angas Hurst, an Australian Mathematical Physicist
- Charles Chamberlain Hurst, British Mendelian geneticist and botanist
- Fannie Hurst, an American novelist
- Geoff Hurst, English footballer
- Glynn Hurst, a professional footballer
- Greg Hurst, an American journalist
- Harold Edwin Hurst (1880–1978), British hydrologist
- James Hurst, a short story writer of The Scarlet Ibis
- James Hurst (baseball), former Major League Baseball player
- John Fletcher Hurst, a bishop in the Methodist Episcopal Church
- Jonny Hurst, England's first Chant Laureate
- Kevan Hurst, a footballer
- Lee Hurst (comedian)
- Lee Hurst (footballer)
- Lillian Hurst, a Puerto Rican actress and comedian
- Michael Hurst, an actor, director and writer
- Mike Hurst (politician), Canadian politician
- Mike Hurst (producer), British singer and record producer
- Murray Hurst, former coach of the North Queensland Cowboys
- Nathan Hurst, an Australian programmer
- Pat Hurst, an American golfer
- Paul Hurst, a former English footballer
- Paul Hurst (actor)
- Rick Hurst, an American actor
- Robert Hurst, various including:
- Robert Hurst (broadcaster), the president of CTV News
- Ryan Hurst, an American actor
- William Hurst (disambiguation)
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Famous quotes containing the word people:
“...a fixed aim furnishes us with a fixed measure, by which we can decide whether such or such an action proposed is worth trying for or not, and as aims must vary with the individual, the decisions of any two people as to the desirableness of an action may not be the same.”
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“Listen, my friend, there are two races of beings. The masses teeming and happycommon clay, if you likeeating, breeding, working, counting their pennies; people who just live; ordinary people; people you cant imagine dead. And then there are the othersthe noble ones, the heroes. The ones you can quite well imagine lying shot, pale and tragic; one minute triumphant with a guard of honor, and the next being marched away between two gendarmes.”
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