There is the concealment of truth, which has to be resorted to so as to prevent anything to the credit of the enemy reaching the public. A war correspondent who mentioned some chivalrous act that a German had done to an Englishman during an action received a rebuking telegram from his employer: "Don't want to hear about any good Germans"; and Sir Philip Gibbs, in Realities of War, says: "At the close of the day the Germans acted with chivalry, which I was not allowed to tell at the time."


Falsehood in Wartime (1928) - Introduction


There is the concealment of truth, which has to be resorted to so as to prevent anything to the credit of the enemy reaching the public. A war...

There is the concealment of truth, which has to be resorted to so as to prevent anything to the credit of the enemy reaching the public. A war...

There is the concealment of truth, which has to be resorted to so as to prevent anything to the credit of the enemy reaching the public. A war...

There is the concealment of truth, which has to be resorted to so as to prevent anything to the credit of the enemy reaching the public. A war...