What with their indolence, what with their number
and the dust they made, I really thought they would
drive me mad before I should reach Casalmaggiore on
my way from Torre Malamberti. I started from
the former place at three a.m., with beautiful weather,
which, true to tradition, accompanied me all through
my journey. Passing through San Giovanni in Croce,
to which the headquarters of General Pianell had been
transferred, I turned to the right in the direction
of the Po, and began to have an idea of the wearisome
sort of journey which I would have to make up to Casalmaggiore.
On both sides of the way some regiments belonging
to the rear division were still camped, and as I passed
it was most interesting to see how busy they were cooking
their ‘rancio,’ polishing their arms, and
making the best of their time. The officers stood
leisurely about gazing and staring at me, supposing,
as I thought, that I was travelling with some part
in the destiny of their country. Here and there
some soldiers who had just left the hospitals of Brescia
and Milan made their way to their corps and shook
hands with their comrades, from whom only illness or
the fortune of war had made them part. They seemed
glad to see their old tent, their old drum, their
old colour-sergeant, and also the flag they had carried
to the battle and had not at any price allowed to
be taken. I may state here, en passant, that
as many as six flags were taken from the enemy in
the first part of the day of Custozza, and were subsequently
abandoned in the retreat, while of the Italians only
one was lost to a regiment for a few minutes, when
it was quickly retaken. This fact ought to be
sufficient by itself to establish the bravery with
which the soldiers fought on the 24th, and the bravery
with which they will fight if, as they ardently wish;
a new occasion is given to them.
As long as I had only met troops, either marching
or camping on the road, all went well, but I soon
found myself mixed with an interminable line of cars
and the like, forming the military and the civil train
of the moving army. Then it was that it needed
as much patience to keep from jumping out of one’s
carriage and from chastising the carrettieri, as they
would persist in not making room for one, and being
as dumb to one’s entreaties as a stone.
When you had finished with one you had to deal with
another, and you find them all as obstinate and as
egotistical as they are from one end of the world
to the other, whether it be on the Casalmaggiore road
or in High Holborn. From time to time things seemed
to proceed all right, and you thought yourself free
from further trouble, but you soon found out your
mistake, as an enormous ammunition car went smack into
your path, as one wheel got entangled with another,
and as imperturbable Signor Carrettiere evidently
took delight at a fresh opportunity for stoppage,
inaction, indolence, and sleep. I soon came to
the conclusion that Italy would not be free when the