EDITOR’S PREFACE
instance toward the actual preparation of the history. Without
documents there can be no history. The essential records of the
War, local as well as central, have therefore to be preserved and to
be made available for research in so far as is compatible with public
interest. But this archival task is a very great one, belonging of
right to the governments and other owners of historical sources
and not to the historian or economist who proposes to use them.
It is an obligation of ownership ; for all such documents are public
trust. The collaborators on this section of the war history, there-
fore, working within their own field as researchers, could only
survey the situation as they found it and report their findings in
the form of guides or manuals; and perhaps, by stimulating
a comparison of methods, help to further the adoption of those
found to be most practical. In every country, therefore, this was
the point of departure for actual work ; although special mono-
graphs have not been written in every instance.
This first stage of the work upon the war history, dealing with
little more than the externals of archives, seemed for a while to
exhaust the possibilities of research. And had the plan of the
history been limited to research based upon official documents
little more could have been done, for once documents have been
labelled © secret’ few government officials can be found with
sufficient courage or initiative to break open the seal. Thus vast
masses of source material essential for the historian were effec-
tively placed beyond his reach, although much of it was quite
harmless from any point of view. While war conditions thus
continued to hamper research, and were likely to do so for many
years to come, some alternative had to be found.
Fortunately such an alternative was at hand in the narrative,
amply supported by documentary evidence, of those who had
played some part in the conduct of affairs during the War, or who,
as close observers in privileged positions, were able to record
from first- or at least second-hand knowledge the economic history
of different phases of the Great War, and of its effect upon society.
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