I could find no words worth saying to him in reply. “What will they be saying about us now in London and Paris?” he went on. “They will be saying,” I replied, “that help must be sent to you,” but my answer I know sounded flat and empty. “Yes,” he said bitterly, “perhaps now you will send some of your generals and your troops to Italy. And so you will put us under orders and under obligations to you, and we shall become your slaves. Italians are used to being looked upon as the slaves of other nations.” “No,” I said, “all that is over. Those of us who know the facts, know what Italy has done and suffered for the Alliance in this war. It will not be forgotten. Moments of supreme crisis such as this test the value and the depth of an Alliance. And ours will stand the test.”
But that day he was inconsolable. For Italy was wounded and bleeding, and the dramatic swiftness and horror of the disaster had bent her pride and almost broken it. But, though the future seemed black as a night without stars, the hope of a coming daybreak remained strong in the hearts of a few. But the struggle ahead would be cruelly hard. What had Italy left to offer those who would still fight in her defence? Still, as of old,
“Only her bosom to die on,
Only her heart for a home,
And a name with her children
to be,
From Calabrian to Adrian Sea,
Mother of cities made free.”
Yet this was a rich reward when, a year later, the dawn broke in all its glory.
* * * * *