—What others have thought and expressed ... modified, exalted, improved
No man creates a new language for himself, at least if he be a wise man, in writing a book. He contents himself with the use of language already known and used and understood by others. No man writes exclusively from his own thoughts, unaided and uninstructed by the thoughts of others. The thoughts of every man are, more or less, a combination of what other men have thought and expressed, although they may be modified, exalted, or improved by his own genius or reflection.
—Justice Joseph Story, Emerson v. Davies
Painting: Pompeo Girolamo Batoni— Detail from Allegory of the Arts