Weymouth's first important work was
The Resultant Greek Testament, an eclectic text based on the work of the most prominent textual critics of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. His major publication was
The Modern Speech New Testament, known as the
Weymouth New Testament, edited by his secretary, Ernest Hampden-Cook, and published in 1903 in New York and
London, England. Weymouth wanted to produce a version that ordinary people could read. It renders Greek idioms into modern English. He also published ''A literal translation of Cynewulf's Elene from Zupitza's text
(1888), based on Cynewulfs Elene mit einem Glossar'' by German philologist
Julius Zupitza. ==References==