One, "The Were-Wolf," as yet unpublished, I have rewritten eight times during the last eight years.
"Eugene Field, A Study In Heredity And Contradictions"
Slason Thompson
The Spirit of the Clergy, translated, from the English of Trenchard and Gordon, was partly rewritten by d'Holbach, 1767. His Sacred Contagion or Natural History of Superstition, was also wrongly attributed to Trenchard and Gordon.
"A Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers of All Ages and Nations"
Joseph Mazzini Wheeler
This restricted and specialized interpretation of a familiar word may serve the purposes of technical scholarship, for undoubtedly there is much to be said in favor of the narrowed signification as we shall see; but unless English literature can be rewritten, plain people who draw their vocabulary from standard authors will go on calling service-books "liturgies" regardless of the fact that they contain many things other than that one office which is entitled to be named by eminence the Liturgy.
"A Short History of the Book of Common Prayer"
William Reed Huntington