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 PARAGRAPH:
 Social history sometimes suffers from the
 reproach that it is vague and general, unable
 to compete with the attractions of political
 history either for the student or for the
 general reader, because of its lack of
 outstanding personalities. In point of fact
 there is often as much material for
 reconstructing the life of some quite
 ordinary person as there is for writing the
 history of Robert of Normandy or Philippa 
 of Hainhault; and the lives of ordinary
 people so reconstructed are, if less spectacular, certainly not less interesting. I believe
 that social history lends itself particularly to
 what may be called a personal treatment,
 and that the past may be made to live again
 for the general reader more effectively by
 personifying it than by presenting it in the
 form of learned treatises on the 
 development of the manor or on medieval
 trade, essential as these are to the specialist.
 For history, after all, is valuable only in so
 far as it lives, and Maeterlinck’s cry, “There
 are no dead,” should always be the historian’s
 motto.