Ghost-Written Famous Quotations

Fred Shapiro fred.shapiro at YALE.EDU
Sat Jun 30 12:35:37 UTC 2007


On Sat, 30 Jun 2007, David A. Daniel wrote:

> I don't know (a) if this is the sort of thing you are looking for, or (b)
> old hat, but there is the famous "Anyone who hates dogs and babies can't be
> all bad", usually attributed to W.C. Fields but actually said by Leo Rosten
> about Fields at a Masquers' Club roast in Field's honor.

In this query I was looking for famous quotations actually coined by
speechwriters and the like, rather than other types of misattributions.

Note that the Yale Book of Quotations documents Bryan Darnton saying "No
man who hates dogs and children can be all bad" in 1937, prior to the Leo
Rosten usage.  This is an example of a common situation in quotation
scholarship, where there is a first level of popular attribution, a second
level of some quotation dictionaries giving a better origin, then a third
level debunking the second-level debunkers.  The Yale Book of Quotations
and Ralph Keyes's books and the efforts of some of the people on ADS-L are
the only sources that make it to the third level to any appreciable
extent. Sometimes Nigel Rees's publications make it there.

Fred Shapiro


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Fred R. Shapiro                             Editor
Associate Librarian for Collections and     YALE BOOK OF QUOTATIONS
   Access and Lecturer in Legal Research     Yale University Press
Yale Law School                             ISBN 0300107986
e-mail: fred.shapiro at yale.edu               http://quotationdictionary.com
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