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+
+Project Gutenberg's The Birth of Yugoslavia, Volume 2, by Henry Baerlein
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Birth of Yugoslavia, Volume 2
+
+Author: Henry Baerlein
+
+Release Date: March 8, 2008 [EBook #24781]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BIRTH OF YUGOSLAVIA, VOLUME 2 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jason Isbell, Irma Spehar and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<h1>THE BIRTH OF<br />
+YUGOSLAVIA</h1>
+
+<p class="center" style="margin-top: 4em; font-weight: bold; font-size: 80%; text-indent: 0em">BY</p>
+
+<p class="center" style="font-weight: bold; font-size: 110%; text-indent: 0em">HENRY BAERLEIN</p>
+
+<p class="center" style="font-weight: bold; font-size: 80%; margin-top: 8em; text-indent: 0em">VOLUME II</p>
+
+<p class="publisher"><span style="letter-spacing: 0.25ex">LONDON</span><br />
+LEONARD PARSONS<br />
+DEVONSHIRE STREET</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>First Published 1922</i><br />
+[<i>All Rights Reserved</i>]<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap" style="font-size: 80%">Leonard Parsons Ltd.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS_OF_VOLUME_II" id="CONTENTS_OF_VOLUME_II"></a>CONTENTS OF VOLUME II</h2>
+
+<table class="toc" border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="ToC">
+
+<tr><td colspan="3" align='right'><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign"><a href="#VI">VI.</a></td><td align='left'><a href="#VI"><span class="smcap">Yugoslavia's First Year of Liberty</span> (<span class="smcap">Autumn 1918
+to Autumn 1919</span>)</a></td><td class="rightalign"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign"><a href="#VII">VII.</a></td><td align='left'><a href="#VII"><span class="smcap">Further Months of Trial</span> (1919-1921)</a></td><td class="rightalign"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign"><a href="#VIII">VIII.</a></td><td align='left'><a href="#VIII"><span class="smcap">Yugoslavia's Frontiers</span> (1921)</a></td><td class="rightalign"><a href="#Page_272">272</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign"><a href="#IX">IX.</a></td><td align='left'><a href="#IX"><span class="smcap">Conclusion: A Few National Characteristics</span></a></td><td class="rightalign"><a href="#Page_392">392</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='left'><a href="#INDEX_OF_VOLUME_II"><span class="smcap">Index</span></a></td><td class="rightalign"><a href="#Page_411">411</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='left'><a href="#map"><span class="smcap">Map of Yugoslavia</span></a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr />
+<h1><a name="THE_BIRTH_OF_YUGOSLAVIA" id="THE_BIRTH_OF_YUGOSLAVIA"></a>THE BIRTH OF YUGOSLAVIA<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></h1>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="VI" id="VI"></a>VI</h2>
+
+<h3>YUGOSLAVIA'S FIRST YEAR OF LIBERTY</h3>
+
+
+<p class="subtitle"><span class="smcap">New foes for old&mdash;Roumanian activities&mdash;The Italian frame of
+mind&mdash;Sensitiveness with respect to their army&mdash;An unfortunate
+naval affair&mdash;What was happening at Pola&mdash;The
+story of the "Viribus Unitis"&mdash;How the Italians landed at
+Pola&mdash;The sea-faring Yugoslavs&mdash;Who set a standard that
+was too high&mdash;An electrical atmosphere and no precautions&mdash;<ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Italians'">Italians'</ins>
+mildness on the Isle of Vis&mdash;Their truculence at
+Kor&#269;ula&mdash;And on Hvar&mdash;How they were received at Zadar&mdash;What
+they did there&mdash;Pretty doings at Krk&mdash;Unhappy
+Pola&mdash;What Istria endured&mdash;The famous town of Rieka&mdash;The
+drama begins&mdash;The I.N.C.&mdash;The Croats' blunder&mdash;Melodrama&mdash;Farce&mdash;Parole
+d'honneur&mdash;The population of the
+town&mdash;The tale continues on the northern isles&mdash;Rab is
+completely captured&mdash;Avanti Savoia!&mdash;The Entente at Rieka&mdash;A
+candid Frenchman&mdash;Economic considerations&mdash;The turncoat
+Mayor&mdash;His fervour&mdash;Three pleasant places&mdash;Italy is
+led astray by Sonnino&mdash;The state of the Chamber&mdash;The state
+of the country&mdash;A fountain in the sand&mdash;Those who held
+back from the Pact of Rome&mdash;Gathering winds&mdash;Why the
+Italians claimed Dalmatia&mdash;Consequences of the Treaty of
+London&mdash;Italian hopes in Montenegro&mdash;What had lately
+been the fate of the Austrians there&mdash;And of the natives&mdash;Now
+Nikita is deposed&mdash;The Assembly which deposed him&mdash;Nikita's
+sorrow for the good old days&mdash;The state of Bosnia&mdash;Radi&#263;
+and his peasants&mdash;Those who will not move with the
+times&mdash;The Yugoslav political parties&mdash;The Slovene question&mdash;The
+sentiments of Triest&mdash;Magnanimity in the Banat&mdash;Teme&#353;var
+in transition&mdash;A sort of war in Carinthia&mdash;Yugoslavia
+begins to put her house in order&mdash;The problem of
+Agrarian Reform&mdash;Frenzy at Rieka&mdash;Admiral Millo explains
+the situation&mdash;His misguided subordinates at &#352;ibenik&mdash;The
+Italians want to take no risks&mdash;Yet they are incredibly
+nonchalant&mdash;One of their victims&mdash;Seven hundred others&mdash;A
+glimpse of the official robberies&mdash;And harshness and
+bribery&mdash;The Italians in Dalmatia before and during the
+War&mdash;Consequent suspicion of this minority&mdash;Allied censure
+of the Italian navy&mdash;Nevertheless the tyranny continues&mdash;A<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+visit to some of the islands&mdash;Which the Italians tried to
+obtain before, but not during, the War&mdash;Our welcome to
+Jel&#353;a&mdash;Proceedings at Starigrad&mdash;The affairs of Hvar&mdash;Four
+men of Komi&#382;a&mdash;The women of Bi&#353;evo&mdash;On the way to
+Blato&mdash;What the Major said&mdash;The protest of an Italian
+journalist&mdash;Interesting delegates&mdash;A digression on Sir
+Arthur Evans&mdash;The dupes of Nikita in Montenegro&mdash;Italian
+endeavours&mdash;Various British commentators&mdash;The murder of
+Mileti&#263;&mdash;D'Annunzio comes to Rieka&mdash;The great invasion of
+Trogir&mdash;The Succession States and their minorities&mdash;Obligations
+imposed on them because of Roumanian Antisemitism.</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">NEW FOES FOR OLD</p>
+
+<p>With the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian army,
+the Serbs and Croats and Slovenes saw that one other
+obstacle to their long-hoped-for union had vanished.
+The dream of centuries was now a little nearer towards
+fulfilment. But many obstacles remained. There would
+presumably be opposition on the part of the Italian and
+Roumanian Governments, for it was too much to hope
+that these would waive the treaties they had wrung from
+the Entente, and would consent to have their boundaries
+regulated by the wishes of the people living in disputed
+lands. Some individual Italians and Roumanians might
+even be less reasonable than their Governments. If
+Austria and Hungary were in too great a chaos to have any
+attitude as nations, there would be doubtless local opposition
+to the Yugoslavs. And as soon as the Magyars had
+found their feet they would be sure to bombard the
+Entente with protestations, setting forth that subject
+nationalities were intended by the Creator to be subject
+nationalities. A large pamphlet, <i>The Hungarian Nation</i>,
+was issued at Buda-Pest in February 1920. It displayed
+a very touching solicitude for the Croats, whom the Serbs
+would be sure to tyrannize most horribly. If only Croatia
+would remain in the Hungarian State, says Mr. A. Kov&aacute;cs,
+Ministerial Councillor in the Hungarian Central Statistical
+Office, then the Magyars would instantly bestow on
+her both Bosnia (which belonged to the Empire as a
+whole) and Dalmatia (which belonged to Austria). That
+is the worst of being a Ministerial Statistical Councillor.
+Another gentleman, Professor Dr. Fodor, has the bright
+idea that "the race is the multitude of individuals who
+inhabit one uniform region." ... Passing to Yugoslavia's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+domestic obstacles, it was impossible to think
+that all the Serbs and Croats and Slovenes would forthwith
+subscribe to the Declaration of Corfu and become excellent
+Yugoslavs. Some would be honestly unable to throw off
+what centuries had done to them, and realize that if they
+had been made so different from their brothers, they were
+brothers still. For ten days there was a partly domestic,
+partly foreign obstacle, but as the King of Montenegro
+did not take his courage in both hands and descend on the
+shores of that country with an Italian army, he lost his
+chance for ever.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ROUMANIAN ACTIVITIES</p>
+
+<p>There was indeed far less trouble from the Roumanian
+than from the Italian side. On October 29, 1918, one
+could say that all military power in the Banat was at an
+end. The Hungarian army took what food it wanted
+and made off, leaving everywhere, in barracks and in
+villages, guns, rifles, ammunition. Vainly did the officers
+attempt to keep their men together. And scenes like
+this were witnessed all over the Banat. Then suddenly,
+on Sunday, November 3, the Roumanians, that is the
+Roumanians living in the country, made attacks on many
+villages, and the Roumanians of Transylvania acted in a
+similar fashion. With the Hungarian equipment and with
+<ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'weapoms'">weapons</ins> of their own they started out to terrorize.
+Among their targets were the village notaries, in whom was
+vested the administrative authority. At Old Moldava,
+on the Danube, they decapitated the notary, a man called
+Kungel, and threw his head into the river. At a village
+near Anina they buried the notary except for his head,
+which they proceeded to kick until he died. Nor did they
+spare the notaries of Roumanian origin, which made it
+seem as if this outbreak of lawlessness&mdash;directed from
+who knows where&mdash;had the high political end of making
+the country appear to the Entente in such a desperate
+condition that an army must be introduced, and as the
+Serbs were thought to be a long way off, with the railways
+and the roads before them ruined by the Austrians, it
+looked as if Roumania's army was the only one available.
+On the Monday and the Tuesday these Roumanian freebooters,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+who had all risen on the same day in regions
+extending over hundreds of square kilometres, started
+plundering the large estates. Near Bela Crkva, on the
+property of Count Bissingen-Nippenburg, a German,
+they did damage to the sum of eight and a half million
+crowns. At the monastery of Me&#353;ica, near Ver&#353;ac, the
+Roumanians of a neighbouring village devastated the
+archimandrate's large library, sacked the chapel and
+smashed his bee-hives, so that they were not impelled
+by poverty and hunger. In the meantime there had been
+formed at Ver&#353;ac a National Roumanian Military Council.
+The placard, printed of course in Roumanian, is dated
+Ver&#353;ac, November 4, and is addressed to "The Roumanian
+Officers and Soldiers born in the Banat," and announces
+that they have formed the National Council. It is a
+Council, we are told, in which one can have every confidence;
+moreover, it is prepared to co-operate in every
+way with a view to maintaining order <i>&icirc;n l&#259;untra &#537;i &icirc;n afar&#259;</i>
+(both internal and external). The subjoined names of
+the committee are numerous; they range from Lieut.-Colonel
+Gavriil Mihailov and Major Petru Jucu downwards
+to a dozen privates. The archimandrate, who
+fortunately happened to be at his house in Ver&#353;ac, begged
+his friend Captain Singler of the <i>gendarmerie</i> to take some
+steps. About twenty Hungarian officers undertook to
+go, with a machine gun, to the monastery on November
+7; at eleven on the previous night Mihailov ordered the
+captain to come to see him; he wanted to know by whom
+this expedition had been authorized. The captain
+answered that Me&#353;ica was in his district, and that he
+had no animus against Roumanians but only against
+plunderers. After his arrival at Me&#353;ica the trouble was
+brought to an end. Nor was it long before the Serbian
+troops, riding up through their own country at a rate
+which no one had foreseen, crossed the Danube and
+occupied the Banat, in conjunction with the French.
+The rapidity of this advance astounded the Roumanians;
+they gaped like Lavengro when he wondered how the
+stones ever came to Stonehenge.... When the Serbian
+commandant at Ver&#353;ac invited these enterprising Roumanian
+officers to an interview he was asked by one of
+them, Major Iricu, whether or not they were to be interned.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+"What made you print that placard?" asked
+the commandant; and they replied that their object
+had been to preserve order. They had not imagined,
+so they said, that the Serbs would come so quickly. "I
+will be glad," said the commandant, "if you will not do
+this kind of thing any more."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE ITALIAN FRAME OF MIND</p>
+
+<p>Italy was not in a good humour. She was well aware
+that in the countries of her Allies there was a marked
+tendency to underestimate her overwhelming triumphs
+of the last days of the War. Perhaps those exploits
+would have been more difficult if Austria's army had not
+suffered a deterioration, but still one does not take 300,000
+prisoners every day. Some faithful foreigners were
+praising Italy&mdash;and she deserved it&mdash;for having persevered
+at all after Caporetto. That disaster had been greatly
+due to filling certain regiments with several thousand
+munition workers who had taken part in a revolt at
+Turin, and then concentrating these regiments in the
+Caporetto salient, which was the most vulnerable sector
+in the eastern Italian front. How much of the disaster
+was due to the Vatican will perhaps never be known.
+But as for the uneducated, easily impressed peasants of
+the army, it was wonderful that all, except the second
+army and a small part of the third, retreated with such
+discipline in view of what they had been brooding on
+before the day of Caporetto. They had such vague ideas
+what they were fighting for, and if the Socialists kept
+saying that the English paid their masters to continue
+with the War&mdash;how were they to know what was the
+truth? The British regiments, who were received not
+merely with cigars and cigarettes and flowers and with
+little palm crosses which their trustful little weavers
+had blessed, but also with showers of stones as they
+passed through Italian villages in 1917, must have sometimes
+understood and pardoned. Then the troops were
+in distress about their relatives, for things were more and
+more expensive, and where would it end? In face of
+these discouragements it was most admirable that the
+army and the nation rallied and reconstituted their <i>morale</i>.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">SENSITIVENESS WITH RESPECT TO THEIR ARMY</p>
+
+<p>Of course one should not generalize regarding nations,
+except in vague or very guarded terms; but possibly it
+would not be unjust to say that the Italians, apart from
+those of northern provinces and of Sardinia, have too much
+imagination to make first-class soldiers. And they are
+too sensitive, as you could see in an Italian military
+hospital. Their task was also not a trifling one&mdash;to
+stand for all those months in territory so forbidding.
+And there would have been more sympathy with the
+Italians in the autumn of 1918 if they had not had such
+very crushing triumphs when the War was practically
+over. What was the condition of the Austrian army?
+About October 15, in one section of the front&mdash;35 kilometres
+separating the extreme points from one another&mdash;the
+following incidents occurred: the Army Command at
+St. Vitto issued an order to the officers invariably to carry
+a revolver, since the men were now attacking them; a
+Magyar regiment revolted and marched away, under
+the command of a Second-Lieutenant whom they had
+elected; at Stino di Livenza, while the officers were
+having their evening meal, two hand grenades were thrown
+into the mess by soldiers; at Codroipo a regiment revolted,
+attacked the officers' mess, and wounded several
+of the people there, including the general in command.
+Such was the Austrian army in those days; and it was
+only human if comparisons were made&mdash;not making any
+allowances for Italy's economic difficulties, her coal,
+her social and her religious difficulties&mdash;but merely bald
+comparisons were made between these wholesale victories
+against the Austrians as they were in the autumn of 1918
+and the scantier successes of the previous years. In
+September 1916 when the eighth or ninth Italian offensive
+had pierced the Austrian front and the Italians reached
+a place called Provachina, Marshal Boroevi&#263; had only
+one reserve division. The heavy artillery was withdrawn,
+the light artillery was packed up, the company commanders
+having orders to retire in the night. Only a
+few rapid-fire batteries were left with a view to deceiving
+the enemy. But as the Italians appeared to the Austrians
+to have no heart to come on&mdash;there may have been other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+reasons&mdash;the artillery was unpacked and the Austrians
+returned to their old front. In May 1917, between Monte
+Gabriele and Doberdo, Boroevi&#263; had no reserve battalion;
+his troops, in full marching kit, had to defend the whole
+front: they were able to do so by proceeding now to this
+sector and now to that. No army is immune from serious
+mistakes&mdash;"We won in 1871," said Bismarck, "although
+we made very many mistakes, because the French made
+even more"&mdash;but the Yugoslavs in the Austrian army
+could not forget such incidents as that connected with
+the name of Professor Pivko. This gentleman, who is
+now living at Maribor, was made the subject of a book,
+<i>Der Verrath bei Carzano</i> ("The Treachery near Carzano"),
+which was published by the Austrian General Staff. His
+battalion commander was a certain Lieut.-Colonel Vidale,
+who was a first cousin of the C.O., General Vidale; and
+when an orderly overheard Pivko, who is a Slovene, and
+several Czech officers, discussing a plan which would
+open the front to the Italians, he ran all the way to the
+General's headquarters and gave the information. The
+General telephoned to his cousin, who said that the allegation
+was absurd and that Pivko was one of his best officers.
+The orderly was therefore thrown into prison, and Pivko,
+having turned off the electricity from the barbed wires
+and arranged matters with a Bosnian regiment, made his
+way to the Italians. The suggestion is that, owing to
+the lie of the land and the weak Austrian forces, it was
+possible for the Italians to reach Trent; anyhow the
+Austrians were amazed when they ceased to advance and
+the German regiment which was in Trent did not have to
+come out to defend it. Everyone in the Austrian army
+recognized that the Italian artillery was pre-eminent
+and that the officers were most gallant, especially in the
+early part of the War, when one would frequently find
+an officer lying dead with no men near him. But such
+episodes as the above-mentioned&mdash;it would be possible,
+but wearisome, to describe others&mdash;could not but have
+some effect on the opposing army, and would be recalled
+when the Italians sang their final panegyric. The reasons
+for the Austrian <i>d&eacute;b&acirc;cle</i> on the Piave are as follows:
+when the Allied troops had reached Rann, Susegana,
+Ponte di Piave and Montiena, the Austrian High Command<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+decided on October 24 to throw against them the
+36th Croat division, the 21st Czech, the 44th Slovene, a
+German division and the 12th Croat Regiment of Uhlans.
+However, the 16th and 116th Croat, the 30th Regiment
+of Czech Landwehr and the 71st Slovene Landwehr Regiment
+declared that they would not fight against the French
+and English, and, instead of advancing, retired. The
+78th Croat Regiment, as well as three other Czech Regiments,
+abandoned the front, after having made a similar
+declaration. At the same time the 96th and 135th Croat
+Regiments, in agreement with the Czech detachments,
+made a breach for the Italians on the left wing at Stino
+di Livenza, while Slav marching formations revolted at
+Udine. The Austro-Hungarian troops consequently had
+to retreat.... No one expects of the Italian army, as
+<ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'as'">a</ins> whole, that it will be on a level with the best, but
+when the British officers who were with the Serbs on the
+Salonica front compare their reminiscences with those
+of the British officers on the Italian front, it is improbable
+that garlands will be strewn for the Italians. Towards
+the end of October a plan was adopted by the British
+and Italian staffs for capturing the island of Papadopoli in
+the Piave; this island, about three miles in length, formed
+the outpost line of the Austrian defences. On the night
+of October 23-24 an attack was to be made by the 2nd
+H.A.C., while three companies of the 1st Royal Welsh
+Fusiliers were to act as reserve. This operation is most
+vividly described by the Senior Chaplain of the 7th
+Division, the Rev. E.&nbsp;C. Crosse, D.S.O., M.C.;<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and he
+says nothing as to what occurred on that part of the island
+which was to be seized by the Italians. Well, nothing
+had occurred, for the Italians did not get across and when
+the water rose they said they could do nothing on that
+night. These are the words of Mr. Crosse's footnote:
+"The obvious question, 'What was going to be done with
+the farther half of the island?' we have purposely left
+undiscussed here. This half was outside the area of the
+7th Division, and as such it falls outside the scope of this
+work for the time being. The subsequent capture of the
+whole island (on the following night) by the 7th Division
+was not part of the original plan." Afterwards, when a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>crossing was made to the mainland, the left flank was unsupported,
+as the Italians did not cross the river, and thus
+the 23rd Division had its flank exposed. A belief is
+entertained that the Italian cavalry is one of the best
+in the world; evidently it is not the best, for on that
+Piave front, where thousands of Italian cavalry were
+available, the only ones who put in their appearance
+early in the battle were three hundred very war-stained
+Northampton Yeomanry.</p>
+
+<p>"The record of the Italian troops in the field renders
+unnecessary an assertion of their courage," says Mr.
+Anthony Dell;<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> "for reckless bravery in assault none
+surpasses them." But when you have said that you
+have nearly summed up their military virtues, for discipline
+is not their strong suit, and they have little sense
+of responsibility. On the other hand, we must remember
+their admirable patience, but the great mass of the people
+have not attained the level of Christianity; they are
+savage both in heart and mind, with no outlook wider
+than that of the family. It is the Italian proletariat
+which is judged by the Yugoslavs, whose otherwise acute
+discernment has been warped by the unhappy circumstances
+of the time. Indifferent to the fact that he
+himself is a compound of physical energy and oriental
+mysticism, the Yugoslav has become inclined to contemplate
+merely the physical side of the Italian, and for
+the most part that portion of it which has to do with war.
+The Italian long-sightedness and prudence and business
+capacity are ignored save in so far as they delayed the
+country's entrance into the Great War. The sensitiveness
+and artistic attributes of the Italians, who gaze with
+aching hearts upon the glories of a sunset, are but rarely
+felt by Serbs, who gather brushwood for the fire that is
+to roast their sucking-pig and who sit down to watch the
+operation, haply with their backs turned to the sunset.
+The Yugoslav, especially the Serb, is a man from the
+Middle Ages brought suddenly into the twentieth century.
+With his heroic heart and his wonderful strength he fails
+to understand those people who, on account of one
+reason or another, have no passion for war. And as the
+military deeds of the Italians have had such effect upon
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>the minds of the Yugoslavs, we have alluded to them at a
+greater length than would otherwise have been profitable.
+The Yugoslavs despise the Italians. Also the Italians,
+who concern themselves with diplomacy, are conscious
+that their keen wits and their long training in the wiles
+of the civilized world, their old traditions and their
+prestige give them a considerable advantage over the
+Yugoslav diplomat, so that this kind of Italian despises
+the Yugoslav. He knows very well that the French or
+British statesmen do not, amid the smoke of after-dinner
+cigars, esteem his case by the same standard as that
+which they apply to the case which the ordinary Yugoslav
+diplomat presents to them in office hours. As for the
+wider Italian circles, one must fear that the old hatred
+of Germany, because the Germans seemed to despise
+them, will henceforward colour the sentiments with which
+they regard the Yugoslavs. It is a state of things between
+these neighbours which other people cannot but view
+with apprehension.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">AN UNFORTUNATE NAVAL AFFAIR</p>
+
+<p>There was in Yugoslav naval circles no very cordial
+feeling for the Italians. The Austrian dreadnought,
+<i>Viribus Unitis</i>, was torpedoed in a most ingenious fashion
+by two resolute officers, Lieutenant Raffaele Paolucci,
+a doctor, and Major Raffaele Rossetti. In October 1917
+they independently invented a very small and light
+compressed-air motor which could be used to propel a
+mine into an enemy harbour. They submitted their
+schemes to the Naval Inventions Board, were given an
+opportunity of meeting, and after three months had brought
+their invention into a practical form. The naval authorities,
+however, refused to allow them to go on any expedition
+till they both were skilled long-distance swimmers.
+Six months had thus to be dedicated entirely to swimming.
+At the end of that time they were supplied with
+a motor-boat and two bombs of a suitable size for blowing
+up large airships. To these bombs were fixed the small
+motors by means of which they were to be propelled
+into the port of Pola, while the two men, swimming by
+their side, would control and guide them. Just after<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+nightfall on October 31, 1918, the raiders arrived outside
+Pola.</p>
+
+<p>Were they aware that anything had happened in the
+Austro-Hungarian navy? On October 26 there appeared
+in the <i>Hrvatski List</i> of Pola a summons to the Yugoslavs,
+made by the Executive Committee of Zagreb, which had
+been elected on the 23rd. This notice in the newspaper
+recommended the formation of local committees, and
+asked the Yugoslavs in the meantime to eschew all
+violence. When Rear-Admiral (then Captain) Methodius
+Koch&mdash;whose mother was an Englishwoman&mdash;read this
+at noon he thought it was high time to do something.
+Koch had always been one of the most patriotically
+Slovene officers of the Austrian navy. On various
+occasions during the War he had attempted to hand over
+his ships to the Italians, and when some other Austrian
+commander signalled to ask him why he was cruising
+so near to the Italian coast he invariably answered, "I
+have my orders." He found it, however, impossible to
+give himself up, as the Italians whom he sighted, no matter
+how numerous they were, would never allow him to come
+within signalling range. Koch had frequently spoken
+to his Slovene sailors, preparing them for the day of
+liberation, and he was naturally very popular among
+them. Let us not forget that such an officer, true to his
+own people, was in constant peril of being shot.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">WHAT WAS HAPPENING AT POLA</p>
+
+<p>On the afternoon of that same day, October 26th,
+when the Austro-Hungarian Empire, with its army and
+navy, was collapsing, Admiral Horthy, an energetic,
+honest, if not brilliant Magyar, the Commander of the
+Fleet at Pola, called to his flag-ship, the <i>Viribus Unitis</i>,
+one officer representing each nationality of the Empire.
+Koch was there on behalf of the Slovenes. The Admiral
+announced that a wholesale mutiny had been planned
+for November 1st, during which the ships' treasuries
+would be robbed, and he asked these officers to collaborate
+with him in preventing it. Koch, at the Admiral's
+request, wrote out a speech that he would deliver to the
+Slovenes, and this document, with one or two notes in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+the Admiral's writing, is in Koch's possession. "If you
+will not listen to your Admirals, then," so ran the speech,
+"you should listen to our national leaders." He
+addressed himself to the men, of course in the Slovene
+language, as a fellow-countryman. He begged them to
+keep quiet. He deprecated all plundering, firstly in
+order that their good name should not be sullied, and also
+pointing out that the neighbouring population was overwhelmingly
+Slovene. Out of 45,000 men only 2000
+could leave by rail; he therefore asked them all to stay
+peacefully at Pola. Meanwhile the local committee had
+been formed; Koch was, secretly, a member of it, and
+on the 28th, Rear-Admiral Cicoli, a kindly old gentleman
+who was port-commandant, advised Koch to join it as
+liaison-officer. It was on the 28th at eight in the morning
+that the officers who had been selected to calm the different
+nationalities started to go round the fleet. That officer
+who spoke to the Germans declared that one must not
+abandon hopes of victory, and that anyhow the War
+would soon be over. Count Thun, who discoursed to
+the Czechs, was ill-advised enough to make the Deity,
+their Kaiser and their oath the main subjects of his
+remarks, so that he was more than once in great danger
+of being thrown overboard. Koch went first of all to
+the <i>Viribus Unitis</i>, but the mutiny had begun; a bugle
+was sounded for a general assembly; it was ignored, and
+the crew let it be known that they were weary of the
+old game, which consisted of the officers egging on one
+nation against another. This mutiny had not yet spread
+to the remaining ships, and on them the speeches were
+delivered. At the National Assembly that evening Koch
+was chosen as chief of National Defence; he thereupon
+went to Cicoli and formally asked to be allowed to join
+the committee. When Vienna refused its assent, Koch
+resigned his commission. By this time all discipline
+had gone by the board, no one thought of such a thing
+as office work and, amid the chaos, sailors' councils
+appeared, with which Koch had to treat. The situation
+was made no easier by the presence of large numbers of
+Germans, Magyars and Italians, of whom the latter also
+formed a National Council. On the 30th, Koch, as chief
+of National Defence, asked Admirals Cicoli and Horthy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+to come at 9 p.m. to the Admiralty, with a view to the
+transference of the military power. At 7.30, in the
+municipal building, there was a joint meeting of the
+Yugoslav and the Italian National Councils, and so many
+speeches were made that the Admirals had to be asked
+to postpone their appearance for two hours; and at
+eleven o'clock, with the street well guarded against a
+possible outbreak on the part of any loyal troops, the whole
+Yugoslav committee, accompanied by one member of
+the Italian committee, went to the Admiralty. Horthy
+had gone home, but Cicoli and his whole staff were
+waiting. The old gentleman was informed that he no
+longer had any power in his hands; he was asked to
+give up his post to Koch, and this he was prepared to do.
+"It is not so hard for me now," he said, "as I have
+meanwhile received a telegram from His Majesty, ordering
+me," and at this point he produced the paper, "to give
+up Pola to the Yugoslavs." The affair had apparently
+been settled between nine and eleven o'clock. Cicoli
+was ready to sign the protocol, but out of courtesy to a
+chivalrous old man this was left undone; after all there
+were witnesses enough.</p>
+
+<p>During the night of October 30th-31st, a radiogram,
+destined for President Wilson, was composed. "Together
+with the Czechs, the Slovaks and the Poles, and in understanding,"
+it said, "with the Italians, we have taken
+over the fleet and Pola, the war-harbour, and the forts."
+It asked for the dispatch of representatives of such
+Entente States as were disinterested in the local national
+question. But now a telegram was received from Zagreb,
+announcing that Dr. Ante Tresi&#263;-Pavi&#269;i&#263;, of the chief
+National Council, would be at Pola at 8 a.m. and that,
+pending his arrival, no wireless was to be sent out. Dr.
+Tresi&#263;-Pavi&#269;i&#263;,<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> poet and deputy for the lower Dalmatian
+islands, had always been, in spite of his indifferent health,
+one of the most strenuous fighters for Yugoslavia. Two
+years of the War he spent in an Austrian prison, but on
+his release he managed to travel up and down Croatia
+and Dalmatia, inciting the Yugoslav sailors to revolt;
+many of them had already read a speech by this silver-tongued
+deputy in the Reichsrath, a speech of which
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>the reading and circulation had been forbidden as a crime
+of high treason. About 9 a.m. of the 31st there was a
+meeting, on board the <i>Viribus Unitis</i>, between Tresi&#263;-Pavi&#269;i&#263;
+and Koch. There was a brief ceremony, the
+leader of the Sailors' Council handing over the vessel
+to the deputy, as representing the National Council of
+Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. Admiral Horthy, in his
+cabin, likewise drew up a <i>proc&egrave;s-verbal</i> to the same
+effect, saying that he was authorized to do this by the
+Emperor, and he supported his statement by the production
+of a wireless message. Koch urged on the doctor
+the necessity of sending the above-mentioned wireless
+to Wilson. "The news of this great event," says Tresi&#263;-Pavi&#269;i&#263;
+in an article in the <i>Balkan Review</i> (May 1919),
+"was dispatched to all the Powers by wireless." But
+unfortunately he seems, whether on his own responsibility
+or that of Zagreb, to have prevented Koch from sending
+it on that day. Captain Janko de Vukovi&#263; Podkapelski
+was then placed in command of the fleet, though the
+Sailors' Council at first declined to accept him. He was
+at heart a patriot, but had taken no active part in Yugoslav
+propaganda and, unluckily for himself, he had been
+compelled to accompany Count Tisza in his recent ill-starred
+tour of Bosnia, when the Magyar leader made a
+last attempt to browbeat the local Slavs. Yet, as no
+other high officer was available, Koch told the Sailors'
+Council that they simply must acknowledge Vukovi&#263;,
+and at 4 p.m. he took over the command, the Yugoslav
+flag being hoisted on all the vessels simultaneously, to
+the accompaniment of the Croatian national anthem and
+the firing of salutes.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE STORY OF THE "VIRIBUS UNITIS"</p>
+
+<p>Three hours previously to this a torpedo-boat, with
+Paolucci and Rossetti on board, had sailed from Venice;
+and at ten o'clock in the evening, as Paolucci tells us,<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> he
+and his companion, after a certain amount of embracing,
+handshaking, saluting and loyal exclamations, plunged
+into the water. The first obstacle was a wooden pier
+upon which sentries were marching to and fro; this
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>was safely passed by means of two hats shaped like
+bottles, which Paolucci and Rossetti now put on. The
+bombs were submerged, and thus the sentry saw nothing
+but a couple of bottles being tossed about by the waves.
+A row of wooden beams, bearing a thin electric wire, had
+then to be negotiated, and the last obstacle consisted of
+half a dozen steel nets which had laboriously to be disconnected
+from the cables which held them. It was now
+nearly six o'clock; the two men cautiously approached
+the <i>Viribus Unitis</i> and fixed one of their bombs just
+below the water-line, underneath the ladder conducting
+to the deck. Paolucci simply records, without comment,
+that the ship was illuminated; perhaps he and his friend
+were too tired to make the obvious deduction that the
+hourly-expected end of the War had really arrived. A
+number of officers from other ships had remained on the
+<i>Viribus Unitis</i> after the previous evening's ceremony;
+but the look-out, seeing the Italians in the water, must
+have thought it was eccentric of them to come swimming
+out at this hour to join in the festivities. A motor-launch
+soon picked them up and they were brought on
+board the flag-ship. "Viva l'Italia!" they shouted,
+for they were proud of dying for their country. "Viva
+l'Italia!" replied some of the crew to this pair of allied
+officers. When they were conducted to Captain Vukovi&#263;
+they told him that his vessel would in a short time be
+blown up. The order was given to abandon ship, and
+Paolucci and his friend relate<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> that when they asked the
+captain if they might also try to save themselves he shook
+them both by the hand, saying that they were brave men
+and that they deserved to live. So they plunged into
+the water and swam rapidly away, but a few minutes
+later they were picked up by a launch and taken back,
+the captain having suddenly begun to suspect, they said,
+that the story of the bomb was untrue. They were
+again made to walk up the ladder, under which lay the
+explosives. It was then 6.28. The ladder was crowded
+with sailors who were also returning to their ship. "Run,
+run for your lives," shouted Paolucci. At last his foot
+touched the deck, and then he and Rossetti ran as fast
+as they could to the stern. Hardly had they got there
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>than a terrific explosion rent the air, and a column of
+water shot three hundred feet straight up into the sky.
+Paolucci and Rossetti were again in the water, and looking
+back they saw a man scramble up the side of the vessel,
+which had now turned completely over, with her keel
+uppermost. There on the keel stood this man, with
+folded arms. It was Vukovi&#263;, who had insisted on going
+down with his ship. About fifty other men were killed.</p>
+
+<p>When Koch came out of his house, feeling that there
+must be no more delay in sending the radiogram to
+President Wilson, a young Italian Socialist ran up to him
+in the street and told him of the fate of the flagship. As
+the news spread everyone thought it must be the work
+of some Austrian officers. It was feared that they would
+explode the arsenal, and that would have meant the
+destruction of the whole town. Amid the uproar and
+chaos, Koch had placards distributed, saying that the
+<i>Viribus Unitis</i> had been torpedoed by two Italians, who
+were in custody. And then the wireless was sent to Paris.</p>
+
+<p>The two officers were taken to the Admiralty and then
+placed on the dreadnought <i>Prince Eugene</i>, it being
+rumoured that the Italians of Pola intended to rescue
+them. Subsequently Koch and other officers, together
+with Dr. Stani&#263;, President of the Italian National Council,
+went out to see the prisoners. Stani&#263; was left alone with
+them for as long as he wished. And when Koch saw them&mdash;he
+did not then shake hands&mdash;and asked if they knew
+what they had done, "I know it," replied Rossetti rather
+arrogantly. Paolucci's demeanour was more modest.</p>
+
+<p>"I was your friend all through the War," said Koch,
+"and now you sink our ships. I can only assume that
+you were ignorant of what had taken place."</p>
+
+<p>They said that that was so.</p>
+
+<p>"But if you had known," said the Admiral to Rossetti,
+"would you have done this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he answered. "I am an officer. I had my
+orders to blow up the ship and I would have obeyed them."</p>
+
+<p>Koch had undertaken that if it turned out that they
+were unaware of the ship's transference to the Yugoslavs
+he would kiss them both. He did so, and allowed them
+to communicate with Italy by wireless.</p>
+
+<p>Never, says Koch, will the unpleasant taste of those<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+kisses leave his mouth. The men were officers; their
+words could not be doubted. But as they must surely
+have been in Venice for at least a day or two before
+October 31, it seems extraordinary that they did not
+hear, via Triest, of what the Emperor Charles was doing
+with his navy. If only they had perfected their invention
+and learned to swim a trifle sooner there would be
+no shadow cast on their achievement, but the Yugoslavs&mdash;who
+had never seen any sort of Italian naval attack
+on Pola during the War&mdash;could not be blamed for thinking
+that the disappearance of their <i>Viribus Unitis</i> would
+be viewed with equanimity by the Italians.... With
+regard to the other vessels, it was arranged in Paris that
+they should proceed, under the white flag, to Corfu with
+Yugoslav commanders; but this was found impossible,
+as they were undermanned. Part of the fleet arrived
+at Kotor and was placed at the disposal of the commander
+of the Yugoslav detachment of the Allied forces
+which had come from Macedonia. A serious episode
+occurred at Pola, where on November 5 an Italian squadron
+arrived and demanded the surrender of the ships. The
+Yugoslav commander succeeded in sending by wireless
+a strong protest to Paris against this barefaced violation
+of the agreement. The Italian commander, Admiral
+Cagni, likewise sent a protest, but Clemenceau upheld
+the Yugoslavs. They were absolutely masters of the
+ex-Austro-Hungarian fleet; it rested solely with them
+either to sink it or hand it over to the Allies in good
+condition. The Yugoslavs did not sink the fleet, because
+they wished to show their loyalty to, and confidence in,
+the justice of the Allies. They never suspected at that
+time that the ships would not be shared at least equally
+between themselves and the Italians. But in December
+1919 the Supreme Council in Paris allotted to the Yugoslavs
+twelve disarmed torpedo-boats for policing and
+patrolling their coasts.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">HOW THE ITALIANS LANDED AT POLA</p>
+
+<p>Admiral Cagni was invited by the Yugoslavs to enter
+the harbour of Pola. But for two and a half days he hesitated
+outside and heavily bombarded the hill-fortress of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+Barbarica, which had been abandoned. At last he made
+up his mind to risk a landing. The Italian girls of Pola,
+dressed in white, came down in a procession to the port;
+their arms were full of flowers for the Italian sailors.
+And the first men who disembarked were buried in flowers
+and kissed and kissed before the girls perceived that, by
+a prudent Italian arrangement, this advance guard consisted
+of men of the Czecho-Slovak Legion. The first
+care of the Italians at Pola was not to ascertain the
+whereabouts of the munition depots; they made for the
+naval museum, where trophies from the battle of Vis
+in 1866 were preserved. These they removed, as well
+as whatever took their fancy at the Arsenal. Among
+their booty was a silver dinner service which it had been
+customary to use on occasions of Imperial visits. An
+Italian officer appeared on the <i>Radetzky</i>. Very roughly
+he asked an officer who he was. "I am the commander,"
+said this first-lieutenant. "No! no!" said the other,
+"I am that." But the Italians for the most part avoided
+going on board the ships.... Admiral Cagni himself
+was very ill at ease, but grew noticeably more confident
+as he observed the utter demoralization of Pola. His
+correspondence likewise underwent the appropriate
+changes. While Koch was in command of 45,000 men,
+Cagni wrote to "His Excellency the most illustrious
+Signor Ammiraglio"; when the numbers were reduced
+to 20,000 the style of address was "Illustrious Signor
+Ammiraglio"; when they fell to 10,000 it became "Al
+Signor Ammiraglio"; when only 5000 remained a letter
+began with the word "Ammiraglio!" and when the
+last man had left Pola and Koch was alone, Cagni sent
+word through his adjutant that he knew no Admiral
+Koch but merely a Signor Koch.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE SEA-FARING YUGOSLAVS</p>
+
+<p>Talking of numbers, one may mention that the Yugoslavs
+formed about 65 per cent. of the Austro-Hungarian
+navy, as one would naturally expect from the sea-faring
+population of Dalmatia and Istria. In the technical
+branches of the service only about 40 per cent. were
+Yugoslavs, for a preference was given to Germans and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+Magyars. Out of 116 chief engineers only two were
+Yugoslavs. Serbo-Croat was an obligatory language;
+but German, as in the army, was the language of command.
+Thus one sees that, in spite of not being favoured,
+the Yugoslavs of the Adriatic, who are natural sailors,
+constituted more than half the personnel of the navy.
+"These Slav people," writes Mr. Hilaire Belloc,<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> who
+took the trouble to go to the Adriatic with a view to
+solving the local problems, "these Slav people have only
+tentatively approached the sea. Its traffic was never
+native to them." If he had continued a little way down
+the coast he would have seen many and many a neat
+little house whose owners are retired sea-captains. "They
+are not mariners," says Mr. Belloc. If he had made a
+small excursion into history he would have learned that
+Venice&mdash;since it was to her own advantage&mdash;made an
+exception of Dalmatia's shipping industry, and while she
+was placing obstacles along the roads that a Dalmatian
+might wish to take, allowed the time-honoured industries
+of the sea to be developed. Such fine sailors were the
+Dalmatians that Benedetto Pesaro, the Venetian Admiral
+against the Turks in the fifteenth century, deplored the
+fact that his galleys were not fully manned by them,
+instead of those "Lombardi" whom he despised. "They
+are," says Mr. John Leyland,<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> the naval authority&mdash;they
+are "pre-eminently a maritime race. The circumstances
+of their geography, and in a chief degree the wonderful
+configuration of their coast-line, with its sheltered
+waters and admirable anchorages, made them sea-farers....
+The proud Venetians knew them as pirates and
+marauders long ago." And "there has never been a
+better seaman," adds Mr. Leyland, "than the pirate
+turned trader." In 1780 the island of Bra&#269; had forty
+vessels, Lussin a hundred, and Kotor, which in the second
+half of the eighteenth century quadrupled her mercantile
+marine, had a much larger fleet than either of them.
+The best-known dockyards were those at Kor&#269;ula and
+Trogir, while the great Overseas Sailing Ship Navigation
+Company at Peljesac (Sabioncello) occupied an important
+position in the world of trade. The company's fleet of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>large sailing vessels was of native construction; both
+crews and captains were natives of the country, so that
+it was in every way the best representative of the Dalmatian
+mercantile marine of the period. When the
+Treaty of Vienna in 1815 gave Venice, Istria and the
+Eastern Adriatic to the Habsburgs the vessels plying in
+those waters were very largely Slav. And with the substitution
+of steam the Dalmatians are still holding their
+own, with this difference, that the ships are now built,
+even as they are manned, not by nobles and the wealthy
+<i>bourgeoisie</i>, but by men who come from modest sea-faring
+or peasant families. In the Austrian mercantile
+marine German capital formed 47&middot;82 per cent., Italian
+capital 19&middot;37 per cent. and Slav capital 31&middot;80 per cent.
+One of these Dalmatian Slavs, Mihanovi&#263;, going out in
+poverty to the Argentine, has followed with such success
+the shipbuilding of his ancestors that he is now among
+the chief millionaires of Buenos Aires. With regard to
+fishing, there are along the Istrian and Dalmatian coast
+more than 5000 small vessels which give employment
+to 19,000 fishermen, of whom only 1000 are citizens of
+Italy. But Mr. Belloc says that these Slav people have
+only tentatively approached the sea, that its traffic was
+never native to them, and that they are not mariners. It
+is marvellous that you can be paid for writing that sort of
+stuff.... By Mr. Belloc's side is the Marchese Donghi,
+who in the <i>Fortnightly Review</i> of June 1922 says: "It is
+superfluous to add that everything which has to do with
+navigation [in Dalmatia] is entirely in the hands of the
+Italians." But I think it is superfluous to contradict a
+gentleman who ingenuously believes that Dalmatia is
+largely Italian because on our maps we have hitherto
+used Italian place-names. Will he say that the population
+of Praha is not Czech because on our maps that
+capital is commonly called Prague? It pleases the
+Marchese to be facetious about what he describes as
+"that queer thing called the Srba Hrvata i Slovenca
+Kralji (Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes)"; he
+should have said "Kraljevina Srba, Hrvata i Slovenaca."
+He says that in Serbia "no industry is possible," whereas
+in one single town, Lescovac, there are no less than
+eleven textile besides other factories. He says that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+one-third of the population of Dalmatia is Italian, and
+"almost exclusively the nobility and the upper <i>bourgeoisie</i>."
+I suppose that is why more than 700 of Dalmatia's leading
+citizens were deported by the Italians after the Great
+War. He says many other nonsensical things, and sums
+it all up by telling us of the "bewildered incomprehension"
+of the Adriatic problem!</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">WHO SET A STANDARD THAT WAS TOO HIGH</p>
+
+<p>Whether rightly or wrongly, the Yugoslavs had formed
+their opinion of the Italian sailors, an opinion which dated
+from the time of Tegetthoff and had not undergone much
+modification by the incidents of this War. They remembered
+what had happened when they cruised outside
+Italian ports; they knew very probably that the British
+had on more than one occasion to break through the
+boom outside Taranto harbour, and they may have read<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
+of the experience of some French ladies who came to the
+Albanian coast on the <i>Citt&agrave; di Bari</i> towards the end of
+1915 with 2000 kilos of milk, clothing and medical supplies
+for the Serbian children who had struggled across the
+mountains. These ladies write that after the torpedoing
+of the <i>Brindisi</i> their own crew ran up and down without
+appearing to see them; the crew had life-belts, those
+of the ladies were taken away. Ultimately they succeeded
+in having themselves put ashore, and the <i>Citt&agrave; di
+Bari</i> fled in the night without landing the stores. And
+in Albania, the ladies say, one witnessed the "stoic
+endurance of the noble Serbian race, of which every day
+brought us more examples. In that procession of ghosts
+and of the dying there was no imploring look, there was
+no hand stretched out to beg." ... The Yugoslavs may
+have known what happened to Lieutenant (now Captain)
+Binnos de Pombara of the French navy. This officer,
+in command of the <i>Fourche</i>, had been escorting the <i>Citt&agrave;
+di Messina</i> and, observing that she was torpedoed, had
+sent to her, perhaps a little imprudently, all his life-boats
+and belts. A few minutes later, when he was himself
+torpedoed, the Italians did not see him; anyhow they
+made for the shore. De Pombara encouraged his men
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>by causing them to sing the Marseillaise and so forth;
+they were in the water, clinging to the wreckage, for
+several hours, until another boat came past. The next
+day at Brindisi, when he met the captain of the <i>Citt&agrave; di
+Messina</i>, this gentleman once more did not see him;
+but the French Government, although de Pombara was
+a very young man, created him an officer of the Legion
+of Honour.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">AN ELECTRICAL ATMOSPHERE AND NO PRECAUTIONS</p>
+
+<p>There was thus a certain amount of tension existing
+between the military and naval services of the Yugoslavs
+and those of Italy. Other Yugoslavs were apprehensive
+as to whether the Italians would not demand the enforcement
+of the Treaty of London. But the United
+States was not bound by that agreement, which was so
+completely at variance with Wilson's principle of self-determination.
+One presumed that, pending an examination
+of these matters, the disputed territories would be
+occupied by troops of all the Allies. But unfortunately
+this did not turn out to be the case. France, Britain
+and America stood by, while the Italians and the Yugoslavs
+took whatsoever they could lay their hands on. As the
+Yugoslav military forces had to come overland, while
+the Italians had command of the sea, it was natural
+that in most places the Italians got the better of the
+scramble; and where they found the Yugoslavs in possession,
+as at Rieka, they usually ousted them by diplomatic
+methods. And in one way or another they managed to
+make their holdings tally, as far as possible, with the
+Treaty of London, and even to go beyond it. Baron
+Sonnino declined to make a comprehensive statement
+as to the Italian programme. Of course he desired in
+the end to exchange Dalmatia&mdash;the seizure of which
+would entail a war with Yugoslavia&mdash;against Rieka.
+But as Italian public opinion had scarcely thought of
+Rieka during the War, he made it his business to cause
+them to yearn for that town. His compatriots were
+asking why Mr. Wilson's Fourteen Points should be waived
+for France in the Sarre Basin, for Britain in Ireland and
+Egypt, but not for them. And some of his would-be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+ingenious compatriots pointed out&mdash;their contentions
+were embodied in the Italian Memorandum to the Supreme
+Council on January 10, 1920&mdash;that as the Treaty of London
+was based on the presumption that Montenegro, Serbia
+and Croatia would remain separate States, this instrument
+had been altogether upset by the merging of those
+Southern Slavs into one country, Yugoslavia; it followed,
+therefore, that the Treaty which attributed Rieka to
+the Croats could no longer be invoked. But the other
+parts of the Treaty which gave the Slav mainland and
+islands to Italy were absolutely unassailable. The
+reader will resent being troubled by this kind of balderdash,
+but Messrs. Clemenceau, Lloyd-George and Wilson
+may have resented it even more.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ITALIAN MILDNESS ON THE ISLE OF VIS</p>
+
+<p>On November 3 the Italians arrived outside Vis
+(Lissa), the most westerly of the large islands, where
+the entire population of 11,000 is Slav, except for the
+family of an honoured inhabitant, Dr. Doimi, and three
+other families related to his. Dr. Doimi's people have
+lived for many years on this island&mdash;his father was mayor
+of the capital, which is also called Vis, for half a century&mdash;and
+now they have become so acclimatized that, as
+he told me, three of his four nephews prefer to call themselves
+Yugoslavs. This phenomenon can be seen all
+down the Adriatic coast. It has often, for example,
+been pointed out to Dr. Vio, the very Italian ex-mayor
+of Rieka, that he has a Croat father and several Croat
+brothers. Thus also the Duimi&#263; family of the same town
+has one brother married to a Magyar lady and very fond
+of the Magyars, a second brother who is a Professor at
+Milan, and a third who lives above Rieka and is a Yugoslav.
+The terms "Yugoslav" and "Italian" have now come
+to signify not what a man is, but what he wants to be,
+applying thus the admirable principle of self-determination.
+Well, in the old days on the isle of Vis between
+two and three hundred people belonged to the Autonomist
+party, owing to their great regard for Dr. Doimi; but
+these say now that they are Yugoslavs, and the Italians&mdash;at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+all events Captain Sportiello, their chief officer at
+Vis&mdash;acknowledged that they must base their demand on
+strategic reasons. A day or two before the Italians
+arrived the population had arrested several Austrian
+functionaries, including the mayor and three gendarmes,
+who had maltreated them during the War. None of these
+persons were Italian; and when the Italian boats were
+sighted a committee went to meet them joyfully and
+brought the officers ashore upon their backs. The
+officers explained that they had come as representatives
+of the Entente and the United States, and for the object&mdash;which
+appeared superfluous&mdash;of protecting Vis from
+German submarines. If the Italians had been everywhere
+as inoffensive as at Vis, it would be more agreeable to
+write about their doings. Captain Sportiello, a naval
+officer, showed himself throughout the months of his
+administration to be sensible; he frequented Yugoslav
+houses. The greatest divergence occurred on June 1,
+1919, when the Italians planned to have a demonstration
+for their national holiday, and asked the inhabitants to
+come to the bioscope, where they would be regaled with
+cakes and sweets; the inhabitants replied that they
+preferred to have Yugoslavia.... But there is a monument
+in the cemetery at Vis to which I must refer. It
+is a very fine monument of white marble, erected by the
+Austrians to commemorate their victory in these waters
+over the Italian navy in 1866.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> On the top there is a
+lion clutching the Italian flag, while on two of the sides
+there are inscriptions in the German language. One of
+them, some feet in length, relates that this memorial is
+placed there for the officers and men who on July 20,
+1866, gave their lives in the service of their Emperor
+and country. The Italians screwed two marble slabs
+across the upper and the lower parts of this inscription, so
+that the German lettering of the central part remained
+visible; on the lower slab one read: "Novembre 1918"
+and on the upper one "Italia Vincitrice" (Victorious
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>Italy). We were taken by several Italian officers to look
+at this. They were so proud of it that they presented us
+with photographs of the monument in its altered state.
+I fear that the Italian mentality escapes me. I should
+not have written anything about them.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THEIR TRUCULENCE AT KOR&#268;ULA</p>
+
+<p>They landed on the same day, November 3, on the
+beautiful and prosperous island of Kor&#269;ula (Curzola),
+putting ashore at Velaluka, the western harbour. With
+the exception of five families, all the people are Yugoslavs;
+and the Italians, who sailed in under a white flag,
+announced that they had come as friends of the Yugoslavs
+and of the Entente, to preserve order and to protect
+them against submarines. On the 5th, they went to
+the town of Kor&#269;ula, where one of the two officers,
+Lieutenant Poggi, of the navy, put his assurances in
+writing, as he had done at Velaluka. He protested
+against the word "Occupation." On the 7th they returned
+to Velaluka and on the 12th went back, with
+about a hundred men, to Kor&#269;ula. Once more he wrote
+that he had not come to occupy the island; he added,
+though, that the district officials should act on the
+opposite peninsula of Sabioncello in the name of the Yugoslavs,
+but over Kor&#269;ula and the island of Lastovo (Lagosta)
+in the name of Italy&mdash;not of the Entente. He wanted
+to remove the Yugoslav flags from public buildings and
+substitute Italian flags. When he was reminded of what
+he had said with regard to the Entente, he exclaimed:
+"No, no! This is Italy!" The chief district official
+protested, and refused to carry out Lieut. Poggi's injunctions,
+nor were the Italians able to do so. This officer
+remained at Kor&#269;ula, requisitioning houses and hoisting
+as many Italian flags as he could. He issued an order
+that after 6.30 p.m. not more than three persons were
+allowed to come together in the streets. His men used
+to offer food to the women of the place, who declined it;
+after which the food was given to the children, who were
+previously photographed in an imploring attitude. There
+was some trouble on December 15 when the <i>Leonidas</i>,
+an American ship, came in with a number of mine-sweepers.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+Apparently the Yugoslavs contravened the Italian regulations
+by omitting to ask whether their band might play
+in the harbour, but, on the supposition that this would
+not be accorded to them, went down to the harbour just
+as if they were not living under regulations. They
+waved American, Serbian and Croatian flags, all of which
+the Italians attempted to seize; the most gorgeous one,
+a Yugoslav flag of silk with gilt fringes, they tore up
+and divided among themselves as a trophy. When the
+<i>Leonidas</i> made fast, a lieutenant leaped ashore and
+placed himself, holding a revolver, in front of an American
+flag. The captain, according to some reports, had his
+men standing to their guns, while others of the crew are
+said to have been given hand-grenades; but whether
+by this method or another, the turbulence on shore was
+calmed and the Italians seem to have invited the captain
+to step off his boat. He preferred, however, to go to
+another port; the populace came overland. One need
+not say that there was jollification.... When the other
+American boats departed, a small one remained at
+Kor&#269;ula. One day a steamer came from Metkovi&#263;,
+having on board a few men of the Yugoslav Legion.
+The people of Kor&#269;ula, not being allowed to take the
+men to their houses, came down quietly to the harbour
+with coffee and bread, but the carabinieri drove them
+away. These legionaries were emigrants to Australia
+and Canada, who had come back to fight for the Entente,
+including Italy. The Italians wanted to arrest them all
+on account of a small Croatian flag which one of them
+was holding, but at the request of the American ship
+they refrained. A certain Marko &#352;imunovi&#263;, who had
+gone to Australia from the Kor&#269;ula village of Ra&#269;i&#353;ca,
+went over to speak to the sailors on the American boat.
+Because of this the carabinieri took him to the military
+headquarters. He was interned for several months in
+Italy.</p>
+
+<p>The long island of Hvar (Lesina) was not occupied
+until November 13. It is interesting, by the by, to note
+how this island came to have its names. In the time of
+the Greek colonists it was known as &#8001; &#966;&#7937;&#961;&#959;&#962;, which subsequently
+became Farra or Quarra, leading to the name
+Hvar, by which it is known to the Slavs. They also,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+in the thirteenth century, gave it an alternative name:
+Lesna, from the Slav word signifying "wooded," for
+the Venetians had not yet despoiled the island of many of
+its forests. Lesna was the popular and Hvar the literary
+name; and the Italians, taking the former of these,
+coined the word Lesina, the sound of which makes many
+of them and of other people think that this is an Italian
+island.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> The question of Slav and Italian geographical
+names in Dalmatia has been carefully investigated by a
+student at Split. Taking the zone which was made over
+to the Italians by the Treaty of London, he found that
+with the exception of a reef called Maon, alongside the
+island of Pago, every island, village, mountain and river
+has a Slav name, whereas out of the total of 114 names
+there were 64 which have no names in Italian; and
+this is giving the Italians credit for such words as Sebenico,
+Zemonico and so forth, which in the opinion of philologists
+are merely modifications of the original &#352;ibenik, Zemunik,
+etc.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">AND ON HVAR</p>
+
+<p>At Starigrad on Hvar the Italians also said that they
+were representatives of the Entente, but soon they prohibited
+the national colours. Being perhaps aware that
+in the whole island, with its population of about 20,000,
+there were before the War only four or five Italians who
+were engaged in selling fruit, their countrymen in November
+1918 did their best, by the distribution of other
+commodities&mdash;rice, flour and macaroni&mdash;to make some
+more Italians. They succeeded at Starigrad in obtaining
+fifteen or twenty recruits. And they made it obvious
+that it would be more comfortable to be an Italian than
+a Yugoslav. The local Reading-Rooms, whose committee
+had received no previous warning, fell so greatly under
+the displeasure of the Italians that one night after ten
+o'clock&mdash;at which time curfew sounded for the Yugoslavs;
+the Italians and their friends could stay out until
+any hour&mdash;the premises were sacked: knives were used
+against the pictures, furniture was taken by assault, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>mirrors did not long resist the fine &eacute;lan of the attacking
+party. Old vases, other ornaments and books were
+thrown into the harbour near the <i>Sirio</i>, the Italian destroyer
+which was anchored ten yards from the Reading-Rooms.
+Of course there was an inquiry; the result of
+it was that several Yugoslavs (and no others) were imprisoned.
+The <i>Sirio's</i> commander was a gentleman of
+some activity; he sent a telegram to Rome and another
+one to Admiral Millo, the Italian Governor of the occupied
+parts of Dalmatia, saying that the people of the island
+longed for annexation. These telegrams he read aloud
+before the islanders, with all his carabinieri in attendance....
+The old-world capital of the island, which is a
+smaller place than Starigrad, was occupied on the same
+day. The first serious encounter took place on December
+4, when the Italians, who were quartered on the upper
+floor of the Sokol or gymnastic club, observed that furniture
+was being taken from the rooms below them and was
+being carried out into the street. If they had asked the
+people what they were about they would have heard
+that these things had been stored in the gymnasium during
+the War and that the place was now to be devoted to its
+original purpose. What they did was to believe at once
+the yarn of a renegade, who told them that the people
+were preparing to blow up the house. The Italians
+opened fire, wounded several persons and killed one of
+their own carabinieri.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">HOW THEY WERE RECEIVED AT ZADAR</p>
+
+<p>On the mainland the Italians were received at &#352;ibenik
+with some suspicion. They announced, however, that
+they came as representatives of the Allies, and begged for
+a pilot who would take them into &#352;ibenik's land-locked
+harbour, through the mine-field. The Yugoslavs consented,
+and after the Italians had installed themselves
+they requisitioned sixty Austrian merchant vessels which
+were lying in that harbour. (They left, as a matter of
+fact, to the Yugoslavs out of all the ex-Austrian mercantile
+fleet exactly four old boats&mdash;<i>Sebenico</i>, <i>Lussin</i>, <i>Mossor</i>
+and <i>Dinara</i>&mdash;with a total displacement of 390 tons.)<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+On the other hand, at Zadar, they were received in a very
+friendly fashion. In this town, as it had been the seat
+of government, with numerous officials and their families,
+the Autonomist anti-Croat party had been, under Austria,
+more powerful than in any other town in Dalmatia. With
+converts coming in from the country, which is entirely
+Slav, the Autonomists in Zadar had become well over half
+the population,<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> which is about 14,000, that of the surrounding
+district being about 23,000. Zadar was thus a
+place apart from the rest of Dalmatia, and although the
+Dalmatian Autonomists were unable to claim any of the
+eleven deputies who went to Vienna, they managed to be
+represented in the provincial Chamber&mdash;the Landtag&mdash;by
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>six out of the forty-one members. The Landtag was not
+elected on the basis of universal suffrage; four out of these
+six members were chosen by large landowners, one (Dr.
+Ziliotto, the mayor) by the town of Zadar and one by
+the Zadar chamber of commerce. Out of the eighty-six
+communes of Dalmatia, Zadar was the solitary one that
+was Autonomist. Some very few Autonomists were wont
+to say that they aspired to union with Italy, but it was
+generally thought that most of them agreed with Dr.
+Ziliotto when he said in the Landtag in 1906: "We,
+separated from Italy by the whole Adriatic&mdash;we a few
+thousand men, scattered, with no territorial links, among
+a population not of hundreds of thousands but of millions
+of Slavs, how could we think of union with Italy?"
+And Dr. Ziliotto was one of those who always regarded
+himself as an Italian. But whether the Zadar Autonomists
+were sincere or not when Austria ruled over them, the
+large majority of them hung out Italian colours after the
+War, and in this they were undoubtedly sincere, although
+the motives varied; in some it was the love of Italy, in
+some it was ambition and in some a thirst for vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>[Although both Yugoslavs and Italians criticize the
+Austrian figures, it is probable that they are pretty
+accurate. The census of 1910 gave for Dalmatia:
+610,669 Serbo-Croats, 18,028 Italians, 3081 Germans and
+1410 Czecho-Slovaks. The Autonomist party claimed
+that they were not 18,028 but 30,000; and that 150,000
+persons in Dalmatia speak Italian. But the Orlando-Sonnino
+Government really did try its utmost to improve
+these figures. At the end of November 1918 the Italians,
+who had charge of the police at Constantinople, put up
+notices asking all Austrian subjects from Dalmatia to
+inscribe themselves with the authorities and thus receive
+protection. In addition to the ordinary large Yugoslav
+population, the Austrian army was still there, and two
+of its officers, in uniform, inscribed themselves. The
+Italians had to endure not a few rebuffs, for they applied
+to people at their houses&mdash;they had found the nationality
+lists at the police offices. The Dutch were looking after
+Yugoslav interests, but received no instructions.]<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">WHAT THEY DID THERE</p>
+
+<p>It was thought at Zadar that the Italians would be
+followed in the course of days by the other Allies. Anyhow
+the Yugoslavs were in no carping spirit; about 5000
+of them assembled to greet the Italian destroyer; they
+were, in fact, more numerous than the Italians. And
+perhaps one should record that on this memorable occasion&mdash;it
+was at an early hour&mdash;Dr. Ziliotto had to complete
+his toilette as he ran down to the quay. Soon the Italian
+captain, shouldered by the crowd, was flourishing two
+flags, the Italian and the Yugoslav&mdash;although his country
+had, of course, not recognized Yugoslavia. For a little
+time it was the colour of roses, and the worm that crept
+into this paradise seems to have been a Japanese warship
+in whose presence each of the two parties wished to demonstrate
+how powerful it was. The carabinieri resolved
+to maintain order, and as an inmate of the seminary
+made, they said, an unpolished gesture at them from a
+window they went off and, with some reinforcements,
+broke into the Slav Reading-Room and damaged it considerably.
+The Italian officers and men at Zadar went
+about their duties for some time without permitting
+themselves to be drawn into local politics, but they were
+told repeatedly that the Slavs are goats and barbarians,
+so that at last the men appear to have concluded that
+strong measures were required. Some of them mingled,
+in civilian clothes, with the unruly elements, and Zadar's
+narrow streets became most hazardous for Yugoslav
+pedestrians. Girls and men alike were roughly handled;
+thrice in one day, for example, a professor&mdash;Dr. Stoikevi&#263;&mdash;had
+his ears boxed as he went to or was coming from his
+school. Yet Zadar is a dignified old place; the chief
+men of the town and the Italian officers did what they
+could to keep it so. But away from their control some
+deeds of truculence occurred. The prison warders, as
+the spirit moved them, forced the Slavs there to be quiet,
+or to shout "Viva Italia!" Most of the Slavs were in
+the gaol for having had in their possession Austrian paper
+money stamped by the Yugoslav authorities; these notes
+were subsequently declared by the Italians to be illegal;
+but if a man came from Croatia, for example, and had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+nothing else, it was a trifle harsh to lock him up and confiscate
+the money. Eight good people went to Zadar
+prison owing to the fact that near the ancient town of
+Biograd they had been sitting underneath the olive trees
+and singing Croat folk-songs. Nor was it much in keeping
+with Zadar's dignity when the "Ufficio Propaganda" put
+out a large red placard which invited boys between the
+ages of nine and seventeen to join in establishing a "Corpo
+Nazionale dei giovani esploratori"&mdash;that is to say, an association
+of boy scouts. It is superfluous to inquire as to
+why these boys were mustered.... When the Austrians
+collapsed, a few old rifles were seized by the Italians and
+the Croats, the latter having fifteen or twenty which they
+hid in various villages. A priest and a medical student
+were privy to this fearful crime. A hue and cry was
+raised by the carabinieri&mdash;the priest vanished, the student
+jumped out of a window of his house and also vanished.
+But the carabinieri would not be denied. They suspected
+that the Albanians of the neighbouring village of Borgo
+Erizzo were abetting the Slavs. It was necessary, therefore,
+to castigate them. The 2500 inhabitants of Borgo
+Erizzo, nearly all of them Albanians who speak their own
+language and Serbo-Croat, while 5 per cent. also speak
+Italian, used to be divided in their sympathies before the
+War&mdash;75 per cent. being adherents of the Slavs in Zadar
+and 25 per cent. of the Autonomists. Now they have,
+excepting 5 per cent., gone over to the Slavs, and as they
+have retained some of the habits of their ancestors, they
+were not going to let the hostile forces win an easy victory.
+A student marched in front of the Italians, then about
+ten carabinieri, then a few ranks of soldiers, and then the
+mob of Zadar. The Albanians were in two groups, twenty
+sheltering behind walls to the right of the road and twenty
+to the left; they were armed with stones, their women
+folk were bringing them relays of these. The encounter
+ended in three carabinieri and seven or eight soldiers
+being wounded. In order to avenge this defeat one
+Duka, who is by birth an Albanian and is a teacher at
+the Italian "Liga" school, which was built a few years
+ago at Borgo Erizzo, determined on the next afternoon to
+attack the Teachers' Institute, which is situated 400 steps
+from his own establishment, and which on the previous<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+day had shown a strong defence. He led the attack in
+person, firing his revolver. But the casualties were light.
+The Teachers' Institute was, after this, occupied by the
+military, and Admiral Millo paid a complimentary visit to
+Duka at his school.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">PRETTY DOINGS AT KRK</p>
+
+<p>Proceeding up the Adriatic we come to the Quarnero
+Islands, of which the most considerable is Krk (Veglia).
+The whole district had, at the last census, 19,562 inhabitants
+whose ordinary language was Serbo-Croat, and 1544 who
+commonly spoke Italian. Of these latter the capital,
+likewise called Krk, contained 1494, and only 644 who
+gave themselves out as Slavs. The town, with its tortuous,
+rather wistful streets, was the residence of the Venetian
+officials, and five or six of those old families remain. The
+rest of the 1494 are nearly all Italianized Slavs, who under
+Austria used to call themselves either Austrians of Italian
+tongue or else Istrians. However, if they wish to be
+Italians now, there is none to say them nay. They
+include five out of the twenty officials, and these five
+gentlemen seem to have boldly said before the War that
+it would please them if this island were to be included in
+the Kingdom of Italy. They did not give their Austrian
+rulers many sleepless nights; this confidence in them was
+justified, for during the War they placed themselves in
+the front rank of those who flung defiant words at Italy,
+and one of them enlarged his weapon, copying upon his
+typewriter some Songs of Hate, which probably were sent
+to him from Rieka or Triest. These typewritten sheets
+were then circulated in the island. One of them&mdash;"Con
+le teste degli Italiani"&mdash;had been specially composed for
+children and expressed the intention of playing bowls
+with Italian heads. The songs for adults were less blood-thirsty
+but not less cruel. The Yugoslavs of the island
+must have been engaged in other War work; no songs
+were provided for them.... When Austria collapsed,
+some youths came from Rieka, flourishing their flags and
+sticks, and crying, "Down with Austria!" "Long live
+Italy!" "Long live Yugoslavia!" "Long live King
+Peter!" There was, in fact general goodwill. A Croat<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+National Council was formed, and was recognized by the
+Italian party; it introduced a censorship, but as the
+postmaster's allegiance was given to the minority he sent
+a telegram to Triest, asking for bread and protection;
+and on November 15 the <i>Stocco</i> arrived. Other people
+soon departed; the Bishop's chancellor and his chaplain,
+two magistrates and a Custom-house official, were shipped
+off to Italy or Sardinia, while the owner of the typewriter
+flew off as a delegate to Paris, having persuaded the town
+council of the capital to vote a sum of 36,000 crowns for
+his expenses&mdash;but a crown was now worth less than half a
+franc. However, two members of the town council thought
+that it was a waste of money; but when they were
+threatened with internment in Sardinia they withdrew
+their active opposition, and the delegate set out. On the
+way he granted an interview to an Italian journalist, and
+depicted the spontaneous enthusiasm with which the
+islanders had called for Italy. But the journalist had
+heard of the National Council and he asked, very naturally,
+whether it shared these sentiments. "Ha parlato da
+Italiano!" ("I have spoken as an Italian"), replied the
+delegate; and when the newspaper reached the island,
+this cryptic saying was interpreted in various ways, his
+critics pointing out that, as he had diverged from truthfulness,
+this was another little Song of Hate. The Bishop,
+Dr. Mahni&#263;,<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> did not go to Italy for several months. He
+was a learned Slovene, an ex-Professor of Gorica University,
+known also as a stern critic of any poetry which was
+not dogmatically religious. He gave vent to his dislike
+of the poetry of Gregor&#269;i&#263; and A&#353;kerc, both of them
+priests. The former, being of a mild disposition, bowed
+before the storm; but A&#353;kerc wrote a cutting satire on
+his critic. The Austrians, disapproving of his religious
+and patriotic activities, thought they would smother him
+by this appointment to a rather out-of-the-way diocese.
+But his influence spread far beyond it, and in the islands
+he was so solicitous for the people's material welfare
+that, for example, he founded savings-banks, which were
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>a great success. It was unavoidable, as he was a man of
+character, that he should come into conflict with the
+Italians, for their commanding officer, a naval captain
+of Hungarian origin, was not a suave administrator. He
+charged a priest with making Yugoslav propaganda
+because he catechized the little children in their own
+language; another priest on the island of Unie, which
+forms a part of the diocese, was accused of making propaganda,
+because he has had in his church two statues&mdash;which
+had been there for years&mdash;of SS. Cyril and
+Methodus. They were removed from the church, he put
+them back; finally he was himself expelled and Unie
+remained without a priest. The naval captain was
+irritated by the old Slavonic liturgy, which is used in all
+except four churches of the diocese, but if he could not
+alter this&mdash;Dr. Mahni&#263; referring him to the Pope&mdash;he and
+the Admiral at Pola, Admiral Cagni, could manage with
+some trouble to rid themselves of the bishop. This
+gentleman, who was in his seventieth year and an invalid,
+said that he would perhaps go to Rome after Easter.
+On March 24 the captain told him that the admiral had
+settled he should sail in three days, but the bishop was
+ill. On the 26th the captain returned with a lieutenant
+of carabinieri to ask if the bishop was still ailing; the
+admiral, it seemed, had ordered that two other doctors&mdash;the
+officer of health for the district and an Italian army
+doctor&mdash;should verify the report of the bishop's own
+medical attendant. The three of them quarrelled for
+two hours, but finally they all signed a memorandum that
+the bishop was ill. On the 31st the captain came to say
+that a destroyer would arrive and that it would take the
+bishop wherever he wanted to go, for the Italians had
+made up their minds that go he must. He had objected
+far too vigorously to their methods&mdash;not approving, for
+example, of the written permit which was given in the
+autumn to the people of two villages in Krk, on which it
+stated that these people could supply themselves with
+timber at Grdnje. This was a State forest, rented by a
+certain man; but the Italians acknowledged that what they
+wanted was adherents, and these grateful villagers, if
+there should be a plebiscite, would vote for them. The
+man appealed to justice, but the judge received a verbal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+order not to act. The villagers were given a general amnesty
+on January 1, an Italian flag was hoisted at the judge's
+office&mdash;the judge had gone away. Another transaction
+which the bishop had resented was after a visit paid by
+the captain and another officer of the French warship
+<i>Annamite</i> to the Yugoslav Reading-Rooms at Lo&#353;inj mali
+(Lussinpiccolo); a priest and two other gentlemen had
+escorted their guests to the harbour at 11 p.m.; during
+the night all three were arrested and the priest deported.
+When the <i>Annamite</i> put in at the lofty island of Cres
+(Cherso) and a couple of officers went to the Franciscan
+monastery, it resulted in the monastery being closed and
+the monks removed. Their simple act of courtesy was,
+said the Italians, propaganda. From Lo&#353;inj mali and
+Cres five ladies were collected, four of them being teachers
+and one the wife of the pilot, Sindi&#269;i&#263;. They were guilty
+of having greeted the French, and on account of this were
+taken to the prison at Pola. Afterwards in Venice they
+were kept for six weeks in the company of prostitutes
+and from there they passed to Sardinia, on which island
+they were retained for nine months. As for Dr. Mahni&#263;,
+he set sail on April 4 at 6 a.m. Being asked whither he
+would like to go, he said he wished to be put down at
+Zengg on the mainland. "Excellent," said the Italians;
+but after a few minutes they said they had received a
+radio from Pola that the bishop must be taken to Ancona.
+He was afterwards allowed to live in a monastery near
+Rome.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">UNHAPPY POLA</p>
+
+<p>The Italians had not been two days in Pola&mdash;in which
+arsenal town the population, unlike that of the country,
+mostly uses the Italian language&mdash;when they made
+themselves disliked by both parties. The President of
+the Italian National Council was told by the Admiral that
+an Austrian crown was to be worth forty Italian centesimi.
+This, said the Admiral, was an order from Rome. The
+President explained that this meant ruin for the people
+of the town. He asked if he might telegraph to Rome.
+"I am Rome!" said the Admiral, or words to that effect.
+Thereupon the President and the colleagues who were
+with him said they would never come again to see the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+Admiral "If I want you," said the Admiral, "I will
+have you brought by a couple of carabinieri." On the
+next day red flags were flying on the arsenal and on the
+day after the Italian troops were taken elsewhere, while
+10,000 fresh ones came from Italy. And Pola, in exchange
+for troops, gave coal. For some time the Italians carried
+off two trainloads of it every day. This absence of coal
+from their own native country, which rather places them
+at the mercy of the coal-producing lands, seems to be
+more their misfortune than anybody's fault, yet the
+Italian party of Rieka added this to their grievances
+against France and Great Britain. Those two countries
+ought, they said, in very decency, to correct the oversights
+of Providence; but no very practical suggestions
+were put forward.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">WHAT ISTRIA ENDURED</p>
+
+<p>According to the Austrian census of 1910 Istria contained
+386,740 inhabitants, of whom 218,854 (or 58&middot;5 per
+cent.) habitually used the Serbo-Croat language, while
+145,552 (or 38&middot;9 per cent.) used Italian. The Yugoslavs
+cannot help regarding the Istrian statistics with suspicion,
+and believing that here, more than in Dalmatia, they were
+made to suffer on account of Austria's alliance with Italy
+and with the Vatican: one of the wrongs which Strossmayer
+fought against was that Istria had been entrusted
+to an Italian Dalmatian bishop who could not speak a
+word of Slav. This prelate appointed to vacant livings
+a number of Italian priests whom the people could not
+understand; a Slav coming to confess had to be supplied
+with an interpreter. As to the statistics in the commune
+of Krmed (Carmedo), for example, of the district of Pola,
+the census of 1900 gave 257 Croats against three Italians,
+whereas in 1910 it was stated that 296 inhabitants spoke
+habitually Italian and six spoke Croatian. Nevertheless,
+if one accepts the Austrian figures, the 58&middot;5 per cent.
+should not be treated as if they did not exist. Perhaps
+the Italian officials could find no interpreters to translate
+their proclamations and decrees; if the Yugoslavs could
+not read them that was a defect in their education. If
+they were unable to write to the authorities or to send<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+private telegrams in Italian, let them hold their peace.
+At any rate, said Vice-Admiral Cagni, we will not encourage
+the Croatian language, and on November 16, 1918,
+he commanded the Yugoslav schools to be shut at eleven
+places in the district and also two schools in the town.
+The Austrians had allowed these schools to remain open
+during the War; but of course if you wish to prevent
+people from learning a language this is one of the first
+steps you would take. Thirteen Yugoslav schoolmasters
+at Pola were thus deprived of their means of livelihood.
+The Admiral said that he really did not want to let matters
+remain in this condition, but all these schools had been
+at the expense of the State; let the Yugoslavs support
+their own schools. They were, as a matter of fact, entitled
+by reason of their numbers to have State-supported
+schools. Yet that was, of course, in the time of Austria;
+and why should Italy be bound by Austrian laws? Italy
+would do what she saw fit. In various places the teachers
+were, in the presence of Italian officers, compelled to use
+Italian for the instruction of purely Yugoslav children.
+Slav schoolmistresses were, in several cases, taken out of
+bed in the middle of the night and conducted on board
+Italian ships. The clergy were ordered to preach in
+Italian in churches, such as that of Veprinac, where the
+congregation is almost entirely Slav<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>&mdash;and so on, and so
+on. Well, there are several ways of governing a mixed
+population, and this is one of them.... "Zadar and
+Rieka," said Pribi&#269;evi&#263; in November to an Italian interviewer
+at Zagreb&mdash;"Zadar and Rieka will enjoy all liberty
+of culture and municipal autonomy. And we are convinced
+that an equal treatment will be accorded to the
+Slav minorities who will be included in your territory.
+We understand and perfectly recognize your right to Triest
+and to Pola, and we would that in Italy our right to Rieka
+and Dalmatia were recognized with the same justice."<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
+<p class="section">THE FAMOUS TOWN OF RIEKA</p>
+
+<p>Rieka is a place concerning which a good deal has
+been written, but I doubt if there have been two words
+more striking than the phrase which the Consiglio Nazionale
+Italiano applies in a pamphlet to the last Hungarian
+Governor. This official, appreciating that his presence
+in the town would serve no useful end, dissolved the State
+police on October 28, 1918, and departed. "H&ocirc;te
+insalu&eacute;, il disparut...." says the pamphlet. After all
+the years of kindness, all the million favours showered
+on the Autonomists by their beloved friends the Magyars,
+after all the dark electioneering tricks and gutter legislation
+which for years had been committed by the Magyars
+to the end that the Autonomists and they should have all
+the amenities of some one else's house, it surely is the
+acme of ingratitude to call this tottering benefactor
+"H&ocirc;te insalu&eacute;." If the Autonomists did not desire to
+reap advantages from any Magyar corruption, they might
+at any time since November 17, 1868, have torn the
+swindling piece of paper, the "krpitsa," from the Agreement
+made between the Magyars and the Croats. Then
+the Croat would not have been kept for all these years a
+slave in his own home.... But on October 28, 1918,
+the "krpitsa" had no more weight, the iniquitous Agreement
+was obsolete, the Croats came into possession of
+their own. The Compromise of 1868, which gave the
+administration of Rieka provisionally to the Magyars,
+was formally denounced on October 29, so that the
+<i>status quo ante</i> returned, and Rieka was again an integral
+part of the Kingdom of Croatia. The Croatian Government
+(that is, the National Council) had then every right
+to depute its adherents at Rieka to undertake the affairs
+of that town. Dr. Vio was too much of a lawyer to dispute
+the legality of any of these statements....</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE DRAMA BEGINS</p>
+
+<p>Some of the leading citizens of Rieka formed themselves
+into a Croat National Council; Dr. Bakar&#269;i&#263; and
+Dr. Lenac went up to the Governor's palace, and with
+them went Dr. Vio, as delegate of the town council. He<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+said they recognized the Croatian Government, on condition
+that the town's municipal autonomy was guaranteed.
+To this they readily consented, with respect to the Italian
+language, to their schools and to the existing town administration,
+thus agreeing to every suggestion which Dr.
+Vio made. Moreover they gave him the town register
+(of births, etc.), which the Magyars had appropriated
+and which was now discovered at the palace. This was
+at 9 a.m. on October 30. Dr. Vio said that he was glad
+that everything had been arranged so amicably. But on
+the same evening the Italian National Council elected
+itself, for a large number of the Autonomist party had
+now become the Italian party. There still remained,
+however, an Autonomist party, which was no longer
+inspired, like the old Autonomists, by despotic sentiments
+towards the Croats, but by a feeling that in consequence
+of this long despotism the Croats were, as yet, not fit to
+govern such a place as Rieka. This is a matter of opinion.
+These Autonomists considered that, at any rate for several
+years, the town should not belong to Yugoslavia or to
+Italy, but be a free town under Allied, British or American,
+control. After five or six years there could be a plebiscite,
+and during that period the population would be encouraged
+to devote itself more to business and less to politics. This
+would tend to make them a united people, with the
+interests of the town at heart. But the Italian party,
+said the Autonomist leader, Mr. Gothardi, did not appear
+to think these interests important; when it was argued
+that Rieka would not flourish under Italy, because of
+the competition with Italy's other ports and especially
+Triest, because of the vast Italian debt, and for other
+reasons, the Italian party answered that even if the grass
+grew in Rieka's streets it must belong to Italy. "Very
+well," said the Slavs, "then we will develop the harbour
+at Bakar" a few miles away. "Infamous idea!"
+exclaimed the Italianists; "Rieka is the harbour for
+the hinterland." There the Autonomists agree with them,
+that the town should finally belong to the State which
+has the hinterland. Mr. Gothardi's party gathered strength
+and he himself became so obnoxious to the Italianists
+that when I saw him in the month of May 1919 he had
+been for several weeks a prisoner in his flat, on account<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+of some thirty individuals with sticks who were lurking
+round the corner. His figures were as follows:</p>
+
+
+<table summary="statistics">
+<tr><td style="text-align: right">6,000</td><td style="text-align: left">Socialists.</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="text-align: right">3,000</td><td style="text-align: left">Autonomists.</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="text-align: right">1,500</td><td style="text-align: left">Yugoslavs.</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="text-align: right; line-height: 25%">&mdash;&mdash;</td><td style="line-height: 25%">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="text-align: right">That is, 10,000</td><td>voters out of 12-13,000.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>One may mention that he, like some others of his party,
+belongs to a family which has been at Rieka for two
+hundred years, whereas of the fifteen gentlemen who
+called themselves the Italian National Council, only one&mdash;a
+cousin of Mr. Gothardi's&mdash;is a member of an old
+Rieka family. Most of the others we are bound to call
+renegades.</p>
+
+<p>It may be asked why the Italian National Council
+was established, and why its members swore that they
+would give their lives if they could thus give Rieka to
+the "Madre Patria." Some of them believed, I am sure,
+that this was for Rieka's good, cultural and economical;
+others entertained the motives that we saw at Zadar&mdash;personal
+ambition and the desire to satisfy some animosities.
+And there were others who remembered what
+occurred in the great harbour warehouses. They hoped,
+they thought that if the town fell to the lot of Italy no
+questions would be asked.<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> There must also have been
+some who could not bear to contemplate the loss of their
+old privileged position.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="section">THE I.N.C.</p>
+
+<p>For a considerable time it was not known who were
+the members of the Italian National Council. From
+internal evidence one saw that they were not particularly
+logical people, for they made much play, in their announcements,
+with "democratic principles" in spite of the
+undemocratic fog in which they wrapped themselves.
+Of course they had not been elected by anyone except
+themselves; but there was a vast difference between
+them and the self-elected Croat National Council, since
+the latter derived their authority from the Croatian
+Government at Zagreb, which Dr. Vio, in the name of the
+Rieka municipality, had recognized&mdash;whereas the Italian
+National Council was destitute of any parent, though they
+would, had they been pressed, have claimed, no doubt,
+the blissfully unconscious "Madre Patria." Subsequently
+it turned out that the I.N.C. consisted of Dr. Vio and of
+fourteen persons who had hitherto not taken part in
+public life. They were fourteen worthies of the background,
+the most remarkable act in the life of their President,
+Dr. Grossich, for example, dating from twenty
+years ago when he was the medical attendant of the
+Archduchess Clothilde, and decorated, so <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'thay'">they</ins> say, his
+consulting-room with black and yellow festoons. The
+I.N.C. appeared at its inception to be different from a
+Russian Soviet because it had no power.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE CROATS' BLUNDER</p>
+
+<p>A number of deplorable transactions ensued, and they
+were not all committed by the Italianists. The proclamations
+which were sent from Zagreb, exhorting the people
+to be tranquil, were printed in the two languages, but
+some Croat super-patriots at Rieka tried to make the
+town mono-lingual. At the railway station and the post
+office they removed the old Italian inscriptions and put
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>up Croatian ones, they wrote to the mayor in Croat,
+which, although Dr. Vio has a Croat father and visited a
+Croat school and a Croat university, was tactless; they
+wrote that Croat would now be the language of the town,
+which was a foolish thing to do. They even seem to have
+demanded the evacuation of the town hall within twenty-four
+hours. And the irresponsible persons who made
+this demand were very properly snubbed by the municipal
+authorities.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">MELODRAMA</p>
+
+<p>These excited patriots, delirious with joy that at
+last their own town was in their hands, did not set Rieka
+on fire, nor did they murder women and children; but the
+Italianists forthwith sent wireless messages to Venice,
+screaming that all these enormities were taking place.
+A few of them rushed off in motors to Triest, where they
+made themselves into a Committee of Public Safety,
+picked up some Triest sympathizers and flew on to Venice,
+where they related breathless stories of foul deeds. One,
+which appeared in the Italian Press, was that three
+children of Rieka had been publicly committed to the
+flames.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">FARCE</p>
+
+<p>On November 4 an Italian destroyer, the <i>Stocco</i>,
+shortly followed by the <i>Emanuele Filiberto</i>, a cruiser,
+came on their errand of humanity. The I.N.C. at once
+organized a plebiscite&mdash;by which is meant not a dull
+giving and counting of votes in the usual election booths.
+A plebiscite, at all events a plebiscite at Rieka, signifies
+for the Italianists a mob assembled in a public thoroughfare;
+photographs of such assemblies illustrate their
+pamphlets and are entitled "plebiscito." At the harbour
+the Italian Admiral, whose name was Raineri, told the
+joyous I.N.C.&mdash;who now had flung aside their anonymity&mdash;that
+he had come to bring them a salute from Italy,
+and that he had been sent to shield Italians and to protect
+Italian interests. The plebiscite threw up its hats and
+waved its flags, and shouted its applause and sang its
+songs. Flowers fell upon the Admiral, and on his men and
+on the guns; the ships, as we are told, were changed to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+floating gardens. But the sailors did not disembark.
+Some ladies, members of the plebiscite, besought the
+Admiral to come ashore, and hoping to persuade the
+men, they climbed on board and playfully seized many
+sailors' caps, which in the town, they said, could be redeemed.
+Then shortly afterwards, the Yugoslav officials
+came to greet the Admiral, as did the commandant of
+the Yugoslav troops which had been for several days
+guarding the town. Meanwhile some unknown persons
+had been up in the old clock-tower and, for reasons known
+perhaps to themselves, had taken in both the Croatian
+and Italian flags; the Admiral drove up to see the
+Governor, Dr. Lenac, and requested that his country's
+flag should be rehoisted, which of course was done. And
+until November 17 the Admiral was nearly every day
+up at the Governor's palace, as a multitude of details had
+to be discussed. A French warship arrived on the 10th,
+followed by a British vessel on the 12th or 13th. Perfect
+calm prevailed. Croatian and Italian flags flew everywhere,
+as well as French ones, British and American.
+The name of the Hotel Deak was altered to Hotel Wilson....
+But the men of the <i>Emanuele Filiberto</i> and the
+<i>Stocco</i> did not land. Colonel Tesli&#263; assured the Admiral
+that if anyone started to set fire to an Italianist child or
+to indulge in any other crime he would prevent it.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">PAROLE D'HONNEUR</p>
+
+<p>All this was very disconcerting to the I.N.C. They
+knew that on the hills outside Rieka were large numbers of
+Italian troops, which had come overland from Istria. But
+how to get them in? Rieka had not been ascribed to the
+Italians by the London Treaty.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> ... On November 15
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>a detachment of Serbian troops arrived, under Colonel
+Maximovi&#263;, and were given a magnificent reception.
+Thousands of people accompanied them, and in front of
+the French destroyer there was a manifestation. Some
+of the Serbs, old warriors who had been under arms since
+the first Balkan War, were moved to tears. The Italianists
+were furious; Admiral Raineri called on the Governor
+for an explanation of the Serbs' arrival. A conference
+was held between the Admiral, the Colonel and two
+Yugoslav officers. If the Serbs remained at Rieka, said
+the Admiral, he would land his marines. Maximovi&#263;
+said he had come in obedience to his orders, and that he
+would have to prevent by force the disembarkation of the
+Italians. At this moment a Serbian officer entered to
+announce that Italian armoured cars were approaching
+from Abbazia. Maximovi&#263; immediately ordered his
+troops to mobilize, but the Admiral said a mistake had
+been made and that the cars would be sent back. (The
+Government Secretary, Dr. Ru&#382;i&#263;, had been told at
+three o'clock by a telephone operator that the Admiral
+had himself telephoned to Abbazia for the cars.) It was
+decided at this conference that on Sunday, November 17,
+the Yugoslav troops would evacuate the town, that it
+would be occupied by Serbian and American troops, and
+that, to mark the alliance, a small Italian detachment
+would be landed. As Admiral Cagni, of Pola, ordered
+that Italian troops should be disembarked at Rieka,
+another conference was held between Admiral Raineri,
+Colonel Maximovi&#263;, Colonel Tesli&#263; and Captain Dvorski
+(of the Yugoslav navy), as well as French and British
+officers. It was arranged <i>sous parole d'honneur d'officier</i>
+that at 4 p.m. the Serbian troops should leave Rieka
+and go to Porto R&eacute;, an hour's sea journey, that the
+Yugoslav troops should remain, and that the Italians
+should not land. No other steps would be taken till
+November 20 at noon, and the Supreme Command would
+be asked to settle the difficulty. As soon as the Serbian
+troops were out at sea, the Italian army, under General di
+San Marzano (attended by a kinematograph), marched
+in from the hills, entering the town simultaneously from
+four directions, in accordance with a strategic plan. The
+General was told what Raineri had agreed to do; he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+replied that he was Raineri's senior, that the final decision
+rested with him, and that he intended to proceed into
+the town. (One of the British officers is said to have
+addressed him rather bluntly.) At 4.30 Raineri landed
+his marines, and afterwards he was dismissed from his
+post&mdash;not, indeed, for having broken his word given at
+the inter-Allied conference, but for having delayed so
+long before disembarking troops in the town. He said
+he had received a written order from the Entente; if
+only Maximovi&#263; had not left he might have shown it
+him. With twenty carabinieri the General went to the
+Governor's palace and asked Dr. Lenac to vacate it.
+He was so excited that he almost pushed the doctor out.
+"There is no room for the two of us," he said. And that
+is how the Italian occupation began. The French and
+British brought some troops in at a later date, but when
+they had six hundred each the Italians had 22,000. With
+the Italians came fifty Americans, so that the force might
+have an international appearance. These Americans
+were given broad-sheets, printed by the town Italianists
+in English; they welcomed the Americans as liberators,
+and informed them that the population had by plebiscite
+declared for annexation to the Motherland. On the
+same night the Yugoslav troops were turned out of their
+barracks into the street by the Italian army.... These
+are, I believe, the main facts as to the occupation which
+has been the subject of much heated argument. I had
+the facts from eye-witnesses and documents: I exposed
+the evidence of each side to the criticism of the other.</p>
+
+<p>Very soon the disorders began. On the evening of
+the occupation Italian troops ran through the town,
+accompanied by some of the plebiscite, and compelled
+the people to remove the Yugoslav colours from their
+button-holes. In cases they surrounded their victim
+and used force. When this was used against women,
+after the arrival of the French and British, it produced
+some serious international affrays. The Italians, who
+invariably outnumbered the others, did not scruple to
+employ their knives; thus in the middle of December
+two French soldiers were stabbed in the back and their
+murderers were never found.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE POPULATION OF THE TOWN</p>
+
+<p>But there had been at Rieka an Englishman for whom
+I have an almost inexpressible admiration. This was
+Mr. A. Beaumont who, a couple of days after the Italians
+occupied the town in the above-mentioned curious fashion,
+sent from Triest a long message to the <i>Daily Telegraph</i>.
+How can anyone not marvel at a gentleman who travels
+to a foreign town which is in the throes of unrest and
+who, undeterred by his infirmity, sits down to grasp
+the rather complicated features of the situation? I am
+not acquainted with Mr. Beaumont, but he must be
+blind, poor fellow, for he says that the Yugoslavs occupied
+with ill-concealed glee a town entirely inhabited by
+some 45,000 Italians. Perhaps somebody will read to
+him the following statistics made after the year 1868,
+when Rieka came under Magyar dominion. The statistics
+were made by the Magyars and Italianists combined, so
+that they do not err in favour of the Yugoslavs. He
+might also be told that the Magyar-Italian alliance closed
+the existing Yugoslav national schools for the 13,478
+Yugoslavs in 1890, while they opened Italo-Magyar
+schools for the 13,012 "Italians" and Magyars. They
+would not even allow the Yugoslavs to have at Rieka
+an elementary school at their own expense. Everything
+possible was done during these decades to inculcate hatred
+and contempt for whatsoever was Slav, hoping thus to
+denationalize the citizens. In view of all this it speaks
+well for Yugoslav steadfastness that they were able to
+maintain themselves. Here are the figures:</p>
+
+<table summary="statistics" style="font-size: 90%">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td><span class="smcap">Yugoslavs.</span></td><td><span class="smcap">Italians.</span></td><td><span class="smcap">Magyars.</span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td style="padding-right: 1.5em">1880</td><td style="padding-right: 1em">10,227 (49%)</td><td style="padding-right: 1em; text-align: right">9,237 (44%)</td><td style="padding-right: 1em; text-align: right">379 (2%)</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="padding-right: 1.5em">1890</td><td style="padding-right: 1em">13,478 (46%)</td><td style="padding-right: 1em; text-align: right">13,012 (44%)</td><td style="padding-right: 1em; text-align: right">1,062 (4%)</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="padding-right: 1.5em">1900</td><td style="padding-right: 1em">16,197 (42%)</td><td style="padding-right: 1em; text-align: right">17,354 (45%)</td><td style="padding-right: 1em; text-align: right">2,842 (7%)</td></tr>
+<tr><td style="padding-right: 1.5em">1910</td><td style="padding-right: 1em">15,692 (32%)</td><td style="padding-right: 1em; text-align: right">24,212 (49%)</td><td style="padding-right: 1em; text-align: right">6,493 (13%)</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Assuming for the moment that these figures are correct&mdash;and
+it is an enormous assumption<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>&mdash;are not the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>Autonomists to be found chiefly among the Italians and
+Magyars? It is claimed that the Autonomist, Socialist
+and Slav vote exceeds that of those who desire annexation
+to Italy. One need not treat <i>au s&eacute;rieux</i> the great procession
+organized by the Italianists, when they could not
+scrape together more than about 4000 persons, including
+many schoolboys and girls, the municipal clerks, visitors
+from Italy, Triest and Zadar. One need not gibe the
+Italianists with the numbers who followed Dr. Vio on
+that famous day when, weary of palavering, he summoned
+round him his supporters and strode off to the Governor's
+palace, where General Grazioli, who had succeeded General
+di San Marzano, was installed.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> Arrived there, Dr. Vio
+with a superb gesture begged the General to accept the
+town in the name of Italy. It is not often in the lifetime
+of a man that he has the opportunity of giving a whole
+town away. Dr. Vio made the most of that occasion;
+if the crowd which followed him was disappointing, there
+may be good explanations. The allegiance of a town,
+one may submit, should be settled in another fashion.
+The house-to-house inquiry, conducted in the spring of
+1919 by the Autonomists&mdash;resulting in an anti-annexionist
+majority&mdash;was much impeded by the police; and it is
+of course the business of the authorities and not of
+any one party to hold elections in a town. Had the
+Italian National Council, bereaving themselves of Italian
+bayonets, <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'hold'">held</ins> a real plebiscite&mdash;secret or otherwise&mdash;the
+result would doubtless have given them pain, but no
+surprise.... And this will happen even if the Magyar
+system of separating Rieka from the suburb of Su&#353;ak
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>is perpetrated. Su&#353;ak contains about 12,500 Yugoslavs
+and extremely few Italianists; and, by the way, to show
+how the Magyars and the Italianists worked together,
+it is worth mentioning that the Magyar railway officials
+who lived at Su&#353;ak were allowed a vote at Rieka, while
+if a Croat lived at Su&#353;ak and carried on his avocation
+at Rieka he could vote in Su&#353;ak only. One must not
+imagine that Su&#353;ak is a poor relation; most people
+would prefer to live there. Dr. Vio was intensely wrathful
+because the British General resided in a beautifully
+situated house there by the sea. Not only is Su&#353;ak
+about twenty yards, across a stream, from Rieka, but
+from a commercial point of view their separation seems
+absurd, since half the port, including the great wood
+depots, is in Su&#353;ak. One of these timber merchants
+presented an example of Italianization. His original
+name was E.&nbsp;R. Sarinich and this was painted on his
+business premises at Su&#353;ak, while in Rieka he called
+himself Sarini. It must have caused him many sleepless
+nights.... Counting Su&#353;ak with Rieka as one town, the
+total population in the autumn of 1918 was about 51 per
+cent. Yugoslav, 39 per cent. Italian and 10 per cent.
+Magyar. These Magyars, by the way, seem not to have
+been noticed by Mr. Beaumont. There were still a good
+number of them in the town. "Whilst Italy might have
+consented," says Mr. Beaumont, "to a compromise with
+Hungary, had that State continued to exist as part of
+the Austro-Hungarian Empire, she certainly never contemplated
+handing over"&mdash;["handing over" is rather
+humorous]&mdash;"Fiume and its exclusively Italian population
+to the Jugo-Slavs." Underneath Mr. Beaumont's dispatch
+there is printed a semi-official statement, sent by Reuter,
+from Rome. "Yesterday afternoon," it says, "our
+troops occupied Fiume. The occupation, which was
+made for reasons of public order, was decided upon in
+view not only of the urgent and legitimate demands of the
+Italian citizens of Fiume, but also of the insistent appeals
+of eminent foreigners...."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE TALE CONTINUES ON THE NORTHERN ISLES</p>
+
+<p>"Italy's reward," says Mr. Beaumont, "must be commensurate
+with her sacrifices, and this is the attitude
+assumed here. It is quite apart from the mere question
+as to whether the Jugo-Slavs are in a majority in certain
+districts or not. Those districts form a part of old Italian
+territory, of Italian lands once peopled and occupied
+by the Italian race and into which, with Austria's encouragement,
+Slav populations have filtered." [I should
+love to know what are Mr. Beaumont's sources.] "The
+question must not be left to local ambition and antipathies.
+It must be decided authoritatively and quickly
+in strong counsel to the Jugo-Slav leaders." ... Let us
+leave Rieka and see how the Italians decided authoritatively
+and quickly on the island of Cres (Cherso). It is
+a large but not thickly populated island; having 8162
+inhabitants for 336 square kilometres. The Yugoslavs,
+according to the census of 1910, number 5714 or 71&middot;3
+per cent., while the Italian-speaking population amounts
+to 2296 or 28 per cent. About the middle of November
+the Italian authorities placed in the village of Martin&#353;&#263;ica,
+which is in the south-western part of the island, 17 soldiers,
+3 carabinieri and a lieutenant. Let me say at once
+that I have never been to Cres, all my knowledge of this
+case comes from a Franciscan monk who lives there,
+the Rev. Ambrose Vlahov, Professor of Theology. At
+Martin&#353;&#263;ica, he says, there is not a single Italianist;
+the entire village is Yugoslav. When the Italian military
+arrived the lieutenant insisted that the priest, Karlo
+Hla&#263;a, should cease to sing the Mass in Old Slav, and that
+for the whole service he should use Italian, the only
+language, said the lieutenant, which he (the lieutenant)
+understood. It was futile for the priest to demonstrate
+what a ridiculous and unreasonable demand this was;
+the lieutenant always came back to the subject, being
+sometimes merely importunate and sometimes using
+menaces. As Hla&#263;a was a model ecclesiastic, highly
+esteemed by his parishioners, the lieutenant comprehended
+that as long as this priest remained, he would
+be foiled in his endeavours; he therefore sought an
+opportunity to turn him out. On January 5, 1919, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+priest had, by order of his bishop, to read during the
+service a pastoral letter on the duties of the faithful
+towards the Church and towards their fellow-men; he
+had also to add a simple and concise commentary. In
+this letter there was a passage dealing with schools, and
+the priest on that topic remarked that "by divine and
+human law every nation may ask that its children should
+be instructed in their mother tongue." When Mass
+was finished, the mayor of the village assembled the
+parishioners and notified them that henceforward, by
+order of the lieutenant, there would no longer be in the
+village a Croatian but an Italian school. And in order
+to mollify the people he added that the lieutenant proposed
+to give subsidies to such as stood in need; they
+had only to present themselves before that officer. But,
+though the people often found it hard to satisfy their simple
+wants and were at that period in very great distress,
+they walked away from this assembly without making
+one step in the lieutenant's direction. This incited him
+to such fury that he ran, accompanied by soldiers and
+carabinieri, to the priest, and publicly, in a loud voice,
+insulted him, calling him an intriguer, a rebel, an agitator.
+On the following day the lieutenant had him conducted
+to the village of Cres by two soldiers and a carabiniere,
+who were all armed.... At Cres the priest was brought
+before the commanding officer of the Quarnero Islands&mdash;our
+old acquaintance, the naval captain of Krk&mdash;who
+happened to be in this village. He started at once to
+bellow at the priest and, striking the table with his
+hand, exclaimed: "This is an Italian island, all Italian,
+nothing but Italian and evermore it will remain Italian."
+About a score of parishioners had come to Cres behind
+their priest and his escort; they begged the commandant
+to set him free. As an answer he harangued them with
+respect to the Italian character of the islands, told them
+that they would have to send their children to the Italian
+school and that the whole village would be Italianized
+and that <i>only in their homes</i> would they be permitted
+to speak Croatian.... On January 8 the priest was
+taken from Cres to the island of Krk, where he was informed
+that he would have to leave his parish, but that
+he might go back there for a day or two to fetch a few<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+necessities. It was raining in torrents when Father Hla&#263;a,
+wet to the skin, arrived at his village on the 11th at seven
+o'clock in the evening. As he suffers from several chronic
+ailments&mdash;which was known to the lieutenant&mdash;this bad
+weather had a grave effect upon him. When he reached
+his house he went to bed at once with a very high temperature.
+After about a quarter of an hour the lieutenant
+appeared with two carabinieri and shouted at him that
+he must get up. This draconian injunction had to be
+obeyed, the more so as the lieutenant was labouring
+under great excitement. He looked at the priest's
+permit which allowed him to come back to the village,
+and said, "If I were in your shoes I wouldn't venture
+to come back here." These words gave Father Hla&#263;a an
+impression that his life was in danger. The lieutenant
+then ordered him not to go out among the people, but
+to stop where he was until he was taken away. Five
+days after this the priest was taken to Rieka, so that
+the villagers were left with nobody to guard them against
+the violence and the temptations offered them by the
+Italians. The Croat inscription outside the school was
+replaced by one in Italian and, with the lieutenant acting
+as teacher, the doors were thrown open. But the only
+children who went there were those of the lieutenant
+himself and those of the mayor, who was a renegade in the
+pay of the Italians. It was announced that heavy fines
+would be inflicted if the other children did not come.
+The villagers were in great trouble and in fear, with
+nobody to give them advice or consolation.... There
+may be some who will be curious to know concerning
+the "Italian" population of this island, which, according
+to the 1910 census, reached the large figure of 28 per cent.
+At a place called Nere&#382;ine it was stated, in the census of
+1880, that the commissioner had found 706 Italians and
+340 Yugoslavs. Consequently an Italian primary school
+was opened; but when it was discovered that the children
+of Nere&#382;ine knew not one traitor word of that language,
+the school was transformed into a Yugoslav establishment.
+This is one case out of many; the 28 per cent.
+would not bear much scrutiny.... But the Italian
+Government, at any rate the "Liga Nazionale" to
+whose endowment it contributes, had been taking in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+hand this question of elementary schools in Istria and
+Dalmatia among the Slav population. The "Liga"
+made gratuitous distribution of clothing, of boots, of
+school-books and so forth. Some indigent Slavs allowed
+themselves in this way to become denationalized.</p>
+
+
+<p style="padding-top: 1.5em">When, however, you examine the embroideries of these
+islands&mdash;particularly beautiful on Rab and on the island
+of wild olive trees, the neighbouring Pag&mdash;you will be
+sure that such an ancient national spirit as they show
+will not be easily seduced. The Magyars, by the way,
+whose culture is more modern, borrowed certain features
+that you find on these embroideries&mdash;the sun, for instance,
+and the cock, which have from immemorial times been
+thought appropriate by these people for the cloth a
+woman wears upon her head when she is bringing a new
+son into the world, whose dawn the cock announces.
+Older than the workers in wood, much older than those
+who carved in stone, are these island embroiderers. In
+this work the people reproduced their tears and laughter.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">RAB IS COMPLETELY CAPTURED</p>
+
+<p>What will it avail to put up "Liga" schools in these
+islands, where the population is 99&middot;67 per cent. Yugoslav
+and 0&middot;31 per cent. Italianist&mdash;that is, if we are content
+to accept the Austrian statistics? What ultimate advantage
+will accrue to Italy from the doings of her
+emissaries, in November 1918, on the isle of Rab? It
+was Tuesday, November 26, when the <i>Guglielmo Pepe</i>
+of the Italian navy put in at the venerable town which
+is the capital of that island. The commander, with an
+Italianist deputy from Istria, climbed up to the town-hall
+with the old marble balcony and informed the mayor and
+the members of the local committee of the Yugoslav
+National Council that he had come in the name of the
+Entente and in virtue of the arrangements of the Armistice;
+he said that in the afternoon Italian troops would
+land, for the purpose of maintaining order. It was pointed
+out to him that no disturbance had arisen, and that,
+according to the terms of the Armistice, he had no right
+to occupy this island. The commander announced that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+he must disarm the national guard, but that the Yugoslav
+flags would not be interfered with; the Italian flag
+would only be hoisted on the harbour-master's office
+and the military headquarters. On the next day, after
+he had been unable to induce the town authorities to
+lower their national flag from the clock-tower, he sent a
+hundred men with a machine gun to carry out his wishes.
+Filled with confidence by this heroic deed, he marched
+into the mayor's office and dissolved the municipal
+council. Armed forces occupied the town-hall, over which
+an Italian flag was flown. An Italian officer was entrusted
+with the mayoral functions and with the municipal
+finances, while the post office was also captured and all
+private telegrams forbidden, not only those which one
+would have liked to dispatch, but those which came in
+from elsewhere&mdash;they were not delivered. All meetings
+and manifestations were made illegal. The commander,
+whose name was Captain Denti di &mdash;&mdash; (the other part
+being illegible), sent a memorandum to the municipal
+council which explained that he dissolved it on account of
+their having grievously troubled the public order; he did
+this by virtue of the powers conferred upon him and in
+the name of the Allied Powers and the United States of
+America. The islanders did not pretend to be experts
+in international law, but they did not believe that he
+was in the right.</p>
+
+<p>"I have every confidence," said the Serbian Regent,
+when he was receiving a deputation of the Yugoslav
+National Council a few days after this&mdash;"I have every
+confidence that the operations for the freedom of the world
+will be accomplished, that large numbers of our brethren
+will be liberated from a foreign yoke. And I feel sure
+that this point of view will be adopted by the Government
+of the Kingdom of Italy, which was founded on these
+very principles. They were cherished in the hearts and
+executed in the deeds of great Italians in the nineteenth
+century. We can say frankly that in choosing to have us
+as their friends and good neighbours the Italian nation
+will find more benefit and a greater security than in the
+enforcement of the Treaty of London, which we never
+signed nor recognized, and which was made at a time
+when nobody foresaw the crumbling of Austria-Hungary."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">AVANTI SAVOIA!</p>
+
+<p>It would be tedious to chronicle a thousandth part
+of the outrages, crimes and stupidities committed on
+Yugoslav territory by the Italians. Where they were
+threatened with an armed resistance they yielded. Thus
+on November 14, when they had reached Vrhnica (Ober-Laibach)
+on their way to Ljubljana (Laibach), they were
+met by Colonel Svibi&#263; with sixteen other officers who had
+just come out of an internment camp in Austria. Svibi&#263;
+requested the Italians to leave Vrhnica. He said that
+he and the Serbian commander at Ljubljana would prevent
+the advance of the Italians into Yugoslav territory.
+They would be most reluctant to be obliged to resort to
+armed force should the Italians continue their advance,
+and they declined responsibility for any bloodshed which
+might ensue.... The colonel of the Italian regiment
+which had been stationed for some days at Vrhnica
+informed the mayor of that commune that he had
+received orders to depart; he retired to the line of demarcation
+fixed by the Armistice conditions.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE ENTENTE AT RIEKA</p>
+
+<p>It was ironical that a young State, struggling into
+life, should be hindered, not by former enemies but
+by friends of its friends. The Italians complained that
+the French, British and Americans were not fraternizing
+with them. In the first place, it was repugnant to the
+sense of justice of these nations when they saw that
+General di San Marzano, after having fraudulently seized
+the town of Rieka and turning its absolutely legal Governor
+into the street, did not ask the citizens to organize a
+temporary local government, in which all parties would be
+represented, but delivered, if you please, the town to fifteen
+gentlemen, the I.N.C., who&mdash;at the very utmost&mdash;represented
+half the population. On November 24, the local
+newspaper <i>Il Popolo</i> announced in a non-official manner
+that the I.N.C., in full accord with the military command,
+had taken over the administration&mdash;<i>i poteri pubblici</i>.
+This, by the way, was never confirmed by the representatives
+of the other Allies. The I.N.C. furthermore<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+declared null and of no effect any intervention of the
+Yugoslav National Council in the affairs of the authorities
+of the State of Rieka. When the Yugoslavs appealed
+to the French, British or Americans they were naturally
+met with sympathy and urged to have patience. Case
+after case of high-handed dealing was reported to these
+officers. They sometimes intervened with good effect;
+far more injustice would have happened; far more
+Croats and Autonomists, for instance, would have been
+deported if the Allies had not interceded. It was now, of
+course, impossible for Yugoslavs to wear their colours;
+nor could they prevent the C.N.I. from hanging vast
+Italian flags on Croat houses. One of the largest flags,
+I should imagine, in the world swayed to and fro
+between Rieka's chief hotel and the tall building on the
+opposite side of the square&mdash;and both these houses,
+mark you, were Croat property. But the Allied officers
+knew very well (and the C.N.I. knew that they knew)
+that more than thirty of the large buildings on the front
+belonged to Croats, whereas under half a dozen were the
+property of Italians or Italianists. The ineffable Mr.
+Edoardo Susmel, in one of his pro-Italian books, entreats
+certain French and British friends of the Yugoslavs to
+come for one hour to Rieka and judge for themselves.
+But twenty minutes would be ample for a man of average
+intelligence. In many ways the presence of the Allies
+grieved the C.N.I. The Allies looked without approval at
+the "Giovani Fiumani," an association of young rowdies
+of whose valuable services the C.N.I. availed itself. But
+if these hired bands could not be dispersed they could have
+limits placed upon their zeal. One of their ordinary
+methods was to sit in groups in caf&eacute;s or in restaurants
+or other places where an orchestra was playing, then to
+shout for the Italian National Anthem and to make themselves
+as nasty as they dared to anyone who did not rise.
+If everybody rose, then they would wait a quarter of
+an hour and have the music played again. The Allied
+officers persuaded General Grazioli to prohibit any National
+Anthem in a public place. It was distasteful to the Allied
+officers when a local newspaper in French&mdash;<i>l'Echo de
+l'Adriatique</i>&mdash;which had been established to present the
+Yugoslav point of view, was continually being suppressed.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+For example, on December 14, it printed a short greeting
+from the Croat National Council to President Wilson.
+The most anti-Italian phrase in this that I could find
+was: "Their fondest hope is to justify to the world,
+to history and to you the great trust you have placed in
+them." This was refused publication. It is unnecessary
+to say that Yugoslav newspapers were confiscated and
+their sale forbidden&mdash;after all, one didn't buy German or
+Austrian newspapers in England during the War, and the
+Italians now regarded the Croats as very pernicious
+enemies. <i>La Rassegna Italiana</i> of December 15 called
+its first article&mdash;printed throughout in italics&mdash;"I
+Prussiani dell' Adriatico," and took to its bosom an "upright
+American citizen" returning from a visit to "Fiume
+nostra," who defined the Yugoslavs "on account of their
+greed and their brutality and their spirit of intrigue and
+their lack of candour as the Prussians of the Adriatic."
+Personally I should submit that the Prussian spirit was
+not wholly lacking in those two Italian officers who penetrated
+on November 25 into the dining-room at the
+quarters of the Custom-house officials and informed them
+that they wanted their piano. No discussion was permitted;
+the piano "transferred itself," as they say in
+some languages, to the Italian officers' mess. The Prussian
+spirit was not undeveloped in a certain Mr. &#352;tigli&#263;&mdash;his
+name might cause his enemies to say he is a renegade,
+but as my knowledge of him is confined to other matters,
+we will say he is the noblest Roman of them all. He likewise
+had a dig at the Custom-house officials; I know not
+whether he was wiping off old scores. Appointed by the
+I.N.C. as director of the Excise office, he communicated
+with the resident officials&mdash;Franjo Jakov&#269;i&#263;, Ivan Mikuli&#269;i&#263;
+and Grga Ma&#382;uran&mdash;on December 5, and told them
+to clear out by the following Saturday, they and their
+families, so that in the heart of winter forty-one persons
+were suddenly left homeless.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">A CANDID FRENCHMAN</p>
+
+<p>This and innumerable other manifestations of Prussianism
+were brought to the attention of the French,
+so that it was not surprising when a Frenchman made a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+few remarks in the <i>Rije&#263;</i> of Zagreb. His article, entitled
+"Mise au point," begins by a reference to the Yugoslav
+cockades which were sometimes worn by the French
+sailors. This, to the Italians, was as if an ally in the
+reconquered towns of Metz and Strasbourg had sported
+the colours of an enemy. "The cases are not parallel,"
+says the Frenchman. "You have come to Rieka and
+to Pola as conquerors of towns that were exhausted,
+yielding to the simultaneous and gigantic pressure of the
+Allied armies. These towns gave themselves up. Are
+they on that account your property, and are we to consider
+as a dead-letter the clauses of the Armistice which
+settled that Pola should be occupied by the Allies? I
+am not so dexterous a diplomat as to be able to follow
+you along this track; let it be decided by others. But
+we who were present perceived that your occupation,
+which you had regulated in every detail, had a close
+resemblance to the entry of a circus into some provincial
+town, whose population is known beforehand to be of a
+hostile character. It is needless to say that this masquerade,
+these vibrating appeals to fraternity that were
+placarded upon the walls gave us in that grey, abandoned
+town an impression of complete fiasco." ["It is significant,"
+writes Mr. Beaumont the Italophil, "that the
+Slav population ... observe an attitude of strange
+reserve and diffidence. They are silent and almost sullen.
+When the Italian fleet first visited Pola there was hardly
+a cheer...."] "Now let me tell you," says the Frenchman,
+"that our entry into Alsace was different. Foch
+was not obliged to send emissaries in advance in order to
+decorate the houses with flags and to erect triumphal
+arches. The French cockades had not nestled in the
+dark hair of our Alsatian women since 1870, for forty-eight
+years the tricolors had been waiting, piously folded
+at the bottom of those wooden chests, waiting for us to
+float them in the wind of victory&mdash;nous rentrions chez
+nous tout simplement. Or, vous n'&ecirc;tes pas chez vous
+ici, messieurs." ["Common reserve and decency should
+have induced the Jugo-Slavs to abstain," says Mr. Beaumont,
+"from rushing to take a place to which they were
+not invited ... an exclusively Italian city."] "Whatever
+you may assert," says the Frenchman, "everything<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+seems to contradict it. Your actors play their parts
+with skill, but the public is frigid. Now the decorations
+are tattered and the torches on the ramparts have grown
+black.... Permit me, following your example, and
+with courtesy, to call back the glories of old Italy, to
+remind myself of the great figures that stride through
+your history and that give to the world an unexampled
+picture of the lofty works of man. Our sailors, who are
+simple and often uncultured men, have no remembrance
+of these things; the brutal facts, in this whirling age in
+which we live, have more power to strike their imagination.
+What is one to say to them when they see their comrades
+stabbed, slaughtered by your men as if they were noxious
+animals&mdash;yesterday at Venice, the day before that at Pola,
+to-day at Rieka. Englishmen and Americans, your
+Allies, receive your 'sincere and fraternal hand' which
+holds a dagger. As a method of pacific penetration you
+will avow that this is rather rudimentary and that the
+laws of Romulus did not teach you such fraternity. We
+have also seen you striking women in the street and
+disembowelling a child. What are we to think of that,
+<i>fratelli d'Italia</i>? Excuse us, but we are not accustomed
+to such incidents. Is it not natural that the legendary,
+gallant spirit of our sailors should infect the crowd?
+Our bluejackets have looked in vain for the three colours
+which are dear to them and which you have excluded
+utterly from all your rows of flags. Well, in default of
+them, they had no choice but to array themselves in the
+cockades which dainty hands pinned on their uniforms....
+And our 'poilus,' in their faded, mud-smeared garments
+walk along 'your' streets, disdainfully regarded by your
+dazzling and pomaded Staff. Do you remember that
+these unshaven fellows who thrust back the Boche in 1918
+are the descendants of those who in 1793 conquered
+Italy and Europe with bare feet? Therefore do not
+strike your breasts if now and then a smile involuntarily
+appears upon their lips. O you who henceforth will be
+known as the immortal heroes of the Piave, if our fellows
+see to-day so many noble breasts, it was not seldom that
+they saw another portion of your bodies."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but that has nothing to do," some people will
+say, "with Rieka's economical position. We admit that
+Croatia has the historical right to the town, but we wish
+to be satisfied that the Croats are not moved by reasons
+that would cause Rieka's ruin. It may be nowadays,
+owing to the unholy alliance between Magyars and
+Italians, that the town, with respect to its trade, is more
+in the Italian sphere than in that of Yugoslavia." The
+answer to this is that Italy's share of the value of the
+imports into Rieka in 1911 was 7&middot;5 per cent. of the total,
+while her share of the value of the exports amounted to
+13 per cent., which proves that Italy depends commercially
+more on Rieka's hinterland than does that hinterland
+upon Italy. It seems to be of less significance that the
+millionaires of Rieka are mostly Croats, for they might
+conceivably have enriched themselves by trade with Italy.
+But of the nine banks, previous to the War the Italianists
+were in exclusive possession of none, while the Croats
+had four; of the eight shipping companies three were
+Croat, three were Magyar, one British, one German&mdash;not
+one Italian. It is true that some Italian writers lay
+it down that Rieka's progress should be co-ordinated with
+that of Venice, to say nothing of Triest, and should not
+be exploited by other States to the injury of the Italian
+Adriatic ports. Their point of view is not at all obscure.
+And all disguise is thrown to the winds in a book which
+has had a great success among the Italian imperialists:
+<i>L'Adriatico et il Mediterraneo</i>, by Mario Alberti (Milan,
+1915&mdash;third edition). The author says that Italy, having
+annexed Triest and Rieka, will be "assured for ever";
+her "economic penetration" of the Balkans "will no
+longer be threatened" by the projected Galatz-Scutari
+(Danube-Adriatic) railway; Italian agriculture which,
+he says, is already in peril, "will be rescued"; the
+Italian fisherman will no longer have the ports of Triest
+and Rieka closed (for exportation to Germany and
+Austria); the national wealth will be augmented by
+"several milliards"; new fields will be open to Italian
+industry; her economic (and military) domination over
+the Adriatic will be absolute. There will, he continues,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+be no more "disturbing" competition on the part of any
+foreign mercantile marine; the Adriatic will be the sole
+property of Italy, and so on. It would be worth while,
+as a study of expressions, to photograph a few Rieka
+Italianists in the act of reading these rapturous pages....
+But lest it be imagined that I have searched for the most
+feeble pro-Italian arguments in order to have no difficulty
+in knocking them down, I will add that their strongest
+argument, taken as it is from the official report of the
+French Consul in 1909, appears to be that the commerce
+of Croatia amounted then to only 7 per cent. of the total
+trade of the port of Rieka. I am told by those who
+ought to know that wood alone, which comes almost
+exclusively from Croatia, Slavonia, etc., represents 16 per
+cent. If other products, such as flour, wine, etc., are
+considered, 50 per cent. of the total trade must be ascribed
+to Croatia, Slavonia, etc. And that does not take into
+account the western Banat and other Yugoslav territories.
+Serbia, too, would now take her part, so that
+there is no need to fear for the position of a Yugoslav
+Rieka based solely&mdash;omitting Hungary and the Ukraine
+altogether&mdash;on her Yugoslav hinterland. Rieka without
+Yugoslavia would be ruined and would degenerate into a
+fishing village, with a great past and a miserable future.
+This could very well be seen during the spring of 1919
+when the communications were interrupted between Rieka
+and Yugoslavia. At Rieka during April eggs were
+80 centimes apiece, while at Bakar, a few miles away,
+they cost 25 centimes; milk at Rieka was 6 crowns the
+litre and at Bakar one crown; beef was 30 crowns a
+kilo and at Bakar 8 crowns. Italy was calling Rieka
+her pearl&mdash;a pearl of great price; the Yugoslavs said
+it was the lung of their country. It is within the knowledge
+of the Italianists that the prosperity of Rieka would
+not be advanced by making her the last of a chain of
+Italian ports, but rather by making her the first port of
+Yugoslavia. What has Italy to offer in comparison with
+the Slovenes and the Croats? The maritime outlet
+of the Save valley, as well as of the plains of Hungary
+beyond it, is, as Sir Arthur Evans points out, the port of
+Rieka. And, in view of the mountainous nature of the
+country which lies for a great distance at the back of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+Split and of Dubrovnik, it would seem that Rieka&mdash;and
+especially when the railway line has been shortened&mdash;will
+be the natural port of Belgrade.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE TURNCOAT MAYOR</p>
+
+<p>One cannot expect in a place with Rieka's history
+that such considerations as these will be debated, calmly
+or otherwise, but at all events on their own merits. They
+will be approached with more than ordinary passion,
+since so many of the people of Rieka have been turncoats.
+Any man who changes sides in his religion or
+his nationality or politics&mdash;presuming, and I hope this
+mostly was so at Rieka, that his reasons were not base&mdash;that
+man will feel profoundly on these matters, more
+profoundly than the average person of his new religion,
+nationality or politics. He will observe the ritual, he
+will give utterance to his thoughts with such an emphasis
+that his old comrades will dislike him and his new associates
+be made uneasy. Thus a convert may not always
+be the most delightful creature in the garden, and he is
+abundant at Rieka. As an illustration we may study
+Dr. Vio. Many persons have repeated that he has a
+Croat father, yet they should in fairness add that his
+father's father came from Venice. But if he came from
+Lapland, that ought to be no reason why the present
+Dr. Vio should not, if he so desires, be an Italian. If
+he had, when he arrived at what is usually called the
+age of discretion, inscribed himself among the sons of
+Italy&mdash;<i>&agrave; la bonheur</i>. But he took no such step. He
+came out as a Croat of the Croats, for when he had finished
+his legal studies he became a town official, but discovered
+that his views&mdash;for he was known as an unbending
+Croat&mdash;hindered his advancement. The party in possession
+of the town council, the Autonomist party, would
+have none of him. At last he, in disgust, threw up his
+post and went into his father's office. He was entitled,
+after ten years' service, to a pension; the Autonomists
+refused to grant it for the reason that he was so dour a
+Croat. Very often, talking with his friends, did Dr. Vio
+mention this. He made a successful appeal to the Court
+at Buda-Pest and a certain yearly sum was conceded to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+him, which he may or may not be still obtaining. Then,
+to the amazement of the Croats, he renounced his nationality
+and became&mdash;no, not an Italian&mdash;a Magyar. He
+was now one of those who called Hungary his "Madre
+Patria," and as a weapon of the ruling Hungarian party
+he was employed against the Italianists. In the year
+1913 the deputy for Rieka died and Dr. Vio was a candidate,
+his opponent being one of the Italianist party,
+Professor Zanella. Dr. Vio had the support of the
+Government officials, railway officials and so forth, and
+was elected. Now he was a Magyar of the Magyars:
+Hungarian police officials were introduced, and Magyar,
+disregarding the town statutes, was employed by them
+as sole official language. The citizens still speak of those
+police.... The War broke out, and Dr. Vio donned a
+uniform, serving chiefly on the railway line between Rieka
+and Zagreb. Gradually he seems to have acquired the
+feeling that it was unnatural for him to be a Magyar of
+the Magyars, even though he was compelled, like so many
+others, to wear this uniform. But one day in 1916 when
+his friend and fellow-officer, Fran &#352;ojat, teacher at the
+High School at Su&#353;ak, walked into his room at Meja,
+when he happened to be putting little flags upon a map,
+he prophesied&mdash;King Peter and the Tzar would have
+been glad to hear him. Presently, he had himself elected
+as the mayor, which enabled him to leave an army so
+distasteful to him. How long would he wait until he
+publicly became a Croat once again? He did not doubt
+that the Entente would win, and told that same friend
+&#352;ojat that Rieka on the next day would be Croat. To
+another gentleman in June of 1918 he said he hoped
+that he would be the first Yugoslav mayor of the town,
+and on that day, out hunting, he sang endless Croat
+songs. In September, to the mayor of Su&#353;ak, "You will
+see," he said, "how well we two as mayors will work
+together." When the Croat National Council entered
+into office at the end of October he again met Mr. &#352;ojat,
+just as he was going up to that interview in the Governor's
+Palace. "Jesam li ja onda imao pravo, jesi li sada
+zadovoljan?" he said. ("Was I not right that time?
+Are you satisfied now?") Joyfully he pressed Mr.
+&#352;ojat's hand and greeted the two other persons who were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+with him. And Mr. &#352;ojat was pleased to think that Vio
+would now be a good Croat, as of old. But on the
+following day he was an Italian.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">HIS FERVOUR</p>
+
+<p>When I went up to see this variegated gentleman&mdash;whose
+personal appearance is that of a bright yellow cat&mdash;he
+purred awhile upon the sofa and then started striding
+up and down the room. As he sketched the history of
+the town, which, he said, had always been Italian and
+would insist on being so, he spoke with horror of the days
+when Jella&#269;i&#263; was in control, and then, remembering
+another trouble, he raised both his hands above his head
+and brought them down with such a crash upon the
+desk where I was writing his remarks that&mdash;but nobody
+burst in; the municipal officials were accustomed to his
+conversation. He was reviling at that moment certain
+Allied officers who had not seen fit to visit him. "I
+care not!" he yelled. "We are Italian! I tell you
+we are Italianissimi!" (He was glad enough, however,
+when his brother Hamlet, who had remained a Yugoslav
+and was on friendly terms with the chief of the carabinieri,
+managed to obtain for the mayor a passport to Italy,
+concerning which the carabinieri had said that they must
+first of all apply to Rome.) The doctor was sure that
+Yugoslavia would not live, for it had two religions;
+and another notable defect of the Croats&mdash;"I speak their
+language quite well," he said&mdash;was that in the whole of
+Rieka not one ancient document was in Croatian. I
+was going to mention that everywhere in Croatia until
+1848 they were in Latin&mdash;but he saw what I was on the
+point of saying and&mdash;"Look here! look here!" he cried,
+"now look at this!" It was a type-written sheet in
+English, whereon was recounted how the mayor had offered
+to four Admirals, who came to Rieka on behalf of their
+four nations, how he had, in order to meet them in every
+way&mdash;"They asked me," he said, with blankness and
+indignation and forgiveness all joined in his expression&mdash;it
+was beautifully done&mdash;"they asked me, the Italian
+mayor of this Italian town, whether it was truly an Italian
+town!"&mdash;well, he had offered to take a real plebiscite,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+on the basis of the last census, and the Admirals, while
+appreciating his offer, had not availed themselves of it.
+(Maybe some one had told them how the census officials,
+chiefly members of the "Giovani Fiumani," had gone
+round, asking the people whether they spoke Italian
+and usually filling in the papers themselves. Presumably
+the mayor did not propose to allow anyone who had then
+been described as an Italian now to call himself Croat.)
+I was just calculating what he was in 1910 when he played
+a trump card and begged me to go up to the cemetery
+and take note of the language used for the epitaphs. Then
+let me return to him on the morrow and say what was the
+nationality of Rieka. There seemed to be the question
+if in such a town where Yugoslavs so often use Italian
+as the business language, many of them possibly might
+use it as the language of death; as it happened the first
+Yugoslav to whom I spoke about this point&mdash;a lawyer
+at whose flat I lunched the following day&mdash;produced a
+little book entitled <i>Regolamento del Cimitero comunale
+di Fiume</i>, and from it one could see that in the local
+cemetery the blessed principle of self-determination was
+in fetters. Chapter iii. lays down that all inscriptions
+must have the approval of the civic body. You are
+warned that they will not approve of sentences or words
+which are indecent, and that they prohibit all expressions
+and allusions that might give offence to anyone, to moral
+corporations, to religions, or which are notoriously false.
+No doubt, in practice, they waive the last stipulation,
+so that the survivors may give praise to famous or to
+infamous men; but I am told that they raised fewer
+difficulties for Italian wordings, and that the stones which
+many people used&mdash;those which the undertakers had in
+stock, with spaces left for cutting in the details&mdash;were
+invariably in Italian.... I hope I have not given an
+unsympathetic portrait of the mayor who has about
+him something lovable. Whatever Fate may have in
+store for Rieka, Dr. Vio is so magnificent an emotional
+actor that his future is assured. I trust it will be many
+years before a stone, in Croat, Magyar or Italian, is
+placed above the body of this volatile gentleman....
+And then perhaps the deed of his administrative life
+that will be known more universally than any other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+will be the omission of an <i>I</i> from certain postage stamps.
+When the old Hungarian stamps were surcharged with
+the word <span class="smcap">Fiume</span>, the sixty-third one in every sheet of
+half an edition was defective and was stamped <span class="smcap">Fume</span>.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THREE PLEASANT PLACES</p>
+
+<p>In the immediate neighbourhood of Rieka, across the
+bay, lies Abbazia, which Nature and the Austrians have
+made into a charming spot. By the famous "Strandweg"
+that winds under rocks and palm and laurel, you go to
+Volosca in the easterly and to Lovrana in the westerly
+direction. Just at the back of all these pretty places
+stands the range of Istria's green mountains. More than
+twenty years ago a certain Dr. Krsti&#263;, from the neighbourhood
+of Zadar, conceived the happy thought of
+printing, in the peasant dialect, a newspaper which would
+discourse on Italy in articles no peasant could resist.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>He was given subsidies, and for some time the newspaper
+was published at Volosca. But perhaps the peasants
+did not read it any more than those near Zadar would
+take in the <i>Pravi Dalmatinac</i> ("The Real Dalmatian"),
+which attempted a few years previous to the War to
+preach sectionalism to the Serbo-Croats. The Italians
+who came to the Abbazia district in November 1918
+did not try such methods. In the combined commune
+of Volosca-Abbazia the population at the 1910 census
+consisted of 4309 Yugoslavs, 1534 German-Austrians,
+and 418 Italians. Most of the 418 had never seen Italy;
+the only true Italians were some officials who had come
+from other parts of Istria. The official language was
+Italian, which was regarded as more elegant. The
+district doctor was Italian, but all the other 29 non-official
+doctors were either Germans, Czechs or Croats.
+At Volosca eighteen years ago there was no Croat school;
+when one was opened the Italian school at once lost half
+its membership and before the War had been reduced to
+25 pupils. Before the War at Abbazia the Croat school
+had six classes, while the Italian had ceased for lack of
+patronage. The German school had 160 pupils; this
+has now been dissolved, the pupils being mostly sent
+to the re-opened Italian school. Thus it will be seen
+that efforts were required to Italianize these places.
+The efforts were continued even during the War, it is
+said by the ex-Empress Zita. At any rate the people
+who had altered their Italian names saw that they had
+been premature and reassumed their former ones. They
+reassumed the pre-war privileges: at Lovrana, for
+example, they "ran" the village, not having allowed
+any communal elections since 1905 and arranging that
+their Croat colleagues in the council should all be illiterate
+peasants. Some Italians were interned in 1915, as the
+Croats had been in 1914, but the council came again
+into their hands. At the meetings they had been obliged,
+owing to the council's composition, to talk Croatian;
+but their own predominance was undisturbed. On their
+return to power during the War they displayed more
+generosity, and admitted even educated Croats to the
+council. And if such out-and-out Italians as the Signori
+Grossmann, Pegan, etc. of Lovrana were kinder to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+Yugoslavs than the Signori Grbac, Koro&#353;a&#263; and Codri&#263;
+of Rieka it may be because the gentle spirit of the place
+affected them. The leading families would even intermarry;
+Signor Gelletich, Lovrana's Italian potentate,
+gave his sister to the Croat chieftain. But, as we have
+said, idylls had to end when in November 1918 the
+Italian army came upon the scene. Abbazia and Volosca
+and Lovrana were painted thoroughly in the Italian
+colours. Public buildings, private houses&mdash;irrespective
+of their inmates&mdash;had patches of green, white and red
+bestowed upon them. Everything was painted&mdash;some
+occupation had to be found for the military, who appeared
+to be more numerous than the inhabitants. Meanwhile,
+their commanding officers had other brilliant ideas: an
+Italian kindergarten was opened at Volosca, and the
+peasant women of the hills around were promised that
+if they came with their children to the opening ceremony,
+every one of them would be rewarded with 1 lb. of sugar.
+So they came and were photographed&mdash;it looked extremely
+well to have so many women seizing this first
+opportunity of an Italian education for their babies.
+Some one at Rieka most unfortunately had forgotten to
+consign the sugar. The Italian officer who was appointed
+to discharge the functions of podest&agrave;, that is,
+mayor, of Abbazia was a certain Lieut.-Colonel Stadler.
+He sent to Rome and Paris various telegrams as to
+the people's ardent hope of being joined to Italy. The
+people's own telegrams to Paris went by a more circuitous
+route. But Stadler did not seem to care much
+for the French, nor yet for the English. About a dozen
+of the educated people, thinking that the French might
+also come to Abbazia and wishing to be able to converse
+with them, took lessons in that language; another dozen,
+with a similar motive, had a Mr. Po&#353;ci&#263;, a naturalized
+American subject, to give them English lessons. Away
+with these baubles, cried Stadler; on January 10 he
+stopped the lessons.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ITALY IS LED ASTRAY BY SONNINO</p>
+
+<p>While the Italians were thus engaged, what was the
+state of opinion in their own country? Would Bissolati's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
+organ, the <i>Secolo</i>, and the <i>Corriere della Sera</i>, which had
+been favourable to the Slavs since Caporetto, have it
+in their power to moderate the fury of the anti-Slav
+papers? Malagodi of the <i>Tribuna</i> said on November 24
+that the position at Rieka had been remedied. But was
+the public fully alive to what was happening at Zadar
+and &#352;ibenik? "While these cities have been nominally
+occupied by us and are under the protection of our flag,
+the Italian population has never been so terrorized by
+Croat brutality as at this moment." The <i>Mattino</i> disclosed
+to its readers in flaring headlines that "Yugoslav
+oppression cuts the throats of the Italian population in
+Dalmatia and terrorizes them." Would the people of
+Italy rather listen to such thrills or to the <i>Secolo</i>,
+which deprecated the contemptuous writings of Italian
+journalists with regard to the Slavs&mdash;the <i>Gazzetta del
+Popolo's</i> "little snakes" was one of the milder terms
+of opprobrium. The <i>Secolo</i> recalled Italy's own illiterate
+herds and the fact that the Italian Risorgimento
+was judged, not by the indifferent and servile mass,
+but by its heroes. It explained that the Treaty of
+London was inspired by the belief that Austria would
+survive, and that for strategic reasons only it had
+given, not Rieka, but most of Dalmatia and the islands
+to Italy.</p>
+
+<p>It was calamitous for Italy that she was being governed
+at this moment not by prudent statesmen such as she
+more frequently produces in the north, but by southerners
+of the Orlando and Sonnino type. The <i>Giornale d'Italia</i>
+would at a word from the Foreign Minister have damped
+the ardour of those journalists and other agitators who
+were fanning such a dangerous fire. Sonnino once
+himself told Radovi&#263;, the Montenegrin, that he could
+not acquiesce in any union of the Yugoslavs, for such a
+combination would be fraught with peril for Italians.
+And now that Southern Slavs were forming what he
+dreaded, their United States, it would have been sagacious&mdash;it
+was not too late&mdash;if he had set himself to win their
+friendship. Incidents of an untoward nature had occurred,
+such as those connected with the Austrian fleet;
+nine hundred Yugoslavs, after fighting side by side with
+the Italians, had actually been interned, many of them<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+wearing Italian medals for bravery;<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> the Yugoslavs, in
+fact, by these and other monstrous methods had been
+provoked. But it was not too late. A Foreign Minister
+not blind to what was happening in foreign countries
+would have seen that if he valued the goodwill of France
+and England and America&mdash;and this goodwill was a
+necessity for the Italians&mdash;it was incumbent on him to
+modify his politics. The British Press was not unanimous&mdash;all
+the prominent publicists did not, like a gentleman
+a few months afterwards in the <i>Spectator</i>, say that "if
+the Yugoslavs contemplated a possible war against the
+Italians, by whose efforts and those of France and Great
+Britain they had so recently been liberated, then would
+the Southern Slavs be guilty of monstrous folly and
+ingratitude." Baron Sonnino might have apprehended
+that more knowledge of the Yugoslav-Italian situation
+would produce among the Allies more hostility; he should
+have known that average Frenchmen do not buy their
+favourite newspaper for what it says on foreign politics,
+and that the <i>Journal des D&eacute;bats</i> and the <i>Humanit&eacute;</i> have
+many followers who rarely read them. And, above all
+else, he should have seen that the Americans, who had
+not signed the Treaty of London, would decline to lend
+themselves to the enforcement of an antiquated pact
+which was so grievously incongruous with Justice, to
+say nothing of the Fourteen Points of Mr. Wilson.
+But Sonnino threw all these considerations to the winds.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>He should have reconciled himself to the fact that
+his London Treaty, if for no other reason than that
+it was a secret one, belonged to a different age and was
+really dead; his refusal to bury it was making him
+unpopular with the neighbours. One does not expect a
+politician to be quite consistent, and Baron Sonnino is,
+after all, not the same man who in 1881 declared that
+to claim Triest as a right would be an exaggeration of
+the principle of nationalities; but he should not in 1918
+have been deaf to the words which he considered of such
+weight when he wrote them in 1915 that he caused them
+to be printed in a Green Book. "The monarchy of
+Savoy," he said in a telegram to the Duke of Avarna on
+February 15 of that year, "has its staunchest root in the
+fact that it personifies the national ideals." Baron Sonnino
+was rallying to the House of Karageorgevi&#263; most of those
+among the Croats and Slovenes who, for some reason or
+other, had been hesitating; for King Peter personified
+the national ideals which the Baron was endeavouring
+to throttle. As Mr. Wickham Steed pointed out in a
+letter to the <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Corriera'"><i>Corriere</i></ins> <i>della Sera</i>, the complete accord
+between Italians and Yugoslavs is not only possible and
+necessary, but constitutes a European interest of the
+first order; if it be not realized, the Adriatic would become
+not Italian nor Slav, but German; if, on the other hand,
+it were brought about, then the language and the culture,
+the commerce and the political influence of Italy would
+not merely be maintained but would spread along the
+eastern Adriatic coast and in the Balkans in a manner
+hitherto unhoped for; if no accord be reached, then the
+Italians would see their whole influence vanish from every
+place not occupied by overwhelming forces. But Sonnino,
+a descendant of rancorous Levantines and obstinate
+Scots, went recklessly ahead; it made you think that
+he was one of those unhappy people whom the gods
+have settled to destroy. He neglected the most elementary
+precautions; he ought to have requested, for
+example, that the French and British and Americans
+would everywhere be represented where Yugoslav territory
+was occupied. But, alas, he did not show that he
+disagreed with the <i>Tribuna's</i> lack of wisdom when it
+said that "the Italian people could never tolerate that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+beside our flag should fly other flags, even if friendly,
+for this would imply a confession of weakness and
+incapacity."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE STATE OF THE CHAMBER</p>
+
+<p>The Government was in no very strong position, for
+the Chamber was now moribund and the many groups
+which had been formed, in the effort to create a war
+Chamber out of one that was elected in the days of peace,
+were now dissolving. An incident towards the end of
+November exhibited not only the contrivances by which
+these groups hoped to preserve themselves, but the eagerness
+with which the Government rushed to placate the
+powerful. A young deputy called Centurione, a member
+of the National Defence group (the Fascio), made a furious
+attack on Giolitti, under cover of a personal explanation.
+He had been accused of being a police spy. Well, after
+Caporetto, convinced that the defeat was partly due to
+the work of Socialists and Giolittians, he had disguised
+himself as a workman and taken part in Socialist meetings.
+He was proud to have played the spy for the good of his
+country, and he finished by accusing Giolitti and six others
+of treason. The whole Chamber&mdash;his own party not being
+strongly represented&mdash;seems to have made for Centurione
+who, amidst an indescribable uproar, continued to shout
+"Traitor!" to anyone who approached him. Sciorati,
+one of the accused, was at last able to make himself heard.
+He related how, at Turin, Centurione had made a fool of
+himself. (But if Lewis Carroll had been with us still
+he might have made himself immortal.) "I have seen
+him disguised," said Sciorati, "as an out-porter at the
+door of my own house." Giolitti appeared and demanded
+an immediate inquiry, with what was described as cold
+and menacing emphasis. And Orlando, the Prime Minister,
+flew up to the Chamber and parleyed with Giolitti
+in the most cordial fashion. Centurione's documents
+were at once investigated and no proofs of treason were
+found, no witnesses proposed by him being examined.
+He was expelled from the National Defence group for
+"indiscipline," his colleagues frustrating his attempts
+to sit next to them by repeatedly changing their seats.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+The attitude of the Fascio was humble and apologetic,
+and the other significant feature of the incident was the
+haste with which Orlando reacted to Giolitti's demand for
+an inquiry.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE STATE OF THE COUNTRY</p>
+
+<p>Baron Sonnino had to take into account not only the
+unsteadiness of the ground on which the Government
+stood, owing to these parliamentary regroupings, but the
+general effects that would ensue from the country's
+financial position. When, in spite of the victory and the
+approach of peace, the exchange price of the lira dropped
+2 to 3 points towards the end of November, this may have
+had, contrary to what was thought by many, no connection
+with a revolutionary movement. The fact that in
+Triest the authorities had been obliged to isolate Italian
+ex-prisoners on their return from Russia, since they were
+imbued with revolutionary principles, at any rate were
+uttering loud revolutionary cries, may have been the
+mere temporary infection caught from their environment.
+But that of which there was no doubt was the entire
+truth of Caroti's statement when that deputy declared
+at Milan that while Italy had been triumphant in the
+military sphere, she had been economically overthrown.
+Bankruptcy had not been announced, though it existed.
+Sonnino may therefore have been impelled not only by
+imperialism, by his inability to adjust himself to the new
+international situation, but by the hope that through his
+policy the new internal situation might be tided over.
+If the thoughts of his fellow-countrymen could be directed
+elsewhere than to bankruptcy and possible revolution, it
+might be that in the meantime adroit measures and good
+luck would brush away these disagreeable phenomena.
+And he would then be rightly looked upon as one who had
+deserved well of his country. So he set about the task
+with such a thoroughness that he turned not alone the
+thoughts of men, but their heads. Professor Italo Giglioli
+addressed a letter to <i>The New Europe</i> in which he said
+that he was claiming now not the territories given by the
+Treaty of London, but considerably more. He wanted
+all Dalmatia, down to Kotor. In foreign hands, he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+said, Dalmatia would be an eternal danger, and besides:
+"What in Dalmatia is not Italian is barbaric!" It was
+a melancholy spectacle to see a man of Giglioli's reputation
+saying that Dubrovnik, the refuge of Slav culture in
+the age of darkness and the place in which Slav literature
+so gloriously arose, was, forsooth, throughout its history
+always Italian in culture and in literature. "Among
+thinking people in Italy," proclaims the Professor, "there
+are indeed but few who will abandon to the Balkan
+processes a region and a people which have always been
+possessed by Italian culture and which constitute the
+necessary wall of Italy and Western Europe against the
+inroads of the half-barbaric East." He protests that it
+is ridiculous of <i>The New Europe</i> to assert that the secret
+Treaty of London is supported by a tiny, discredited band
+of Italians; and indeed that Review has regretfully to
+acknowledge that many of his countrymen have been
+swept off their feet and carried onward in the gale of
+popular enthusiasm. Giglioli ends by asking that his
+name be removed from the list of <i>The New Europe's</i>
+collaborators. In vain does the <i>The New Europe</i> say that
+the Professor's programme must involve a war between
+Italians and Yugoslavs. "We must be prepared for a
+new war," said the <i>Secolo</i> on January 12. "The Italians
+who absolutely demand the conquest of Dalmatia must
+have the courage to demand that the demobilization of
+our Army should be suspended, and to say so very clearly."
+And the <i>Corriere della Sera</i> warned Orlando of the consequences
+if he took no steps to silence the mad voices.
+"No one knows better," it wrote, "than the Minister of
+the Interior, who is also Premier, that on the other coast
+Italy claims that part of Dalmatia which was assigned
+to her by the Treaty of London, but not more.... If
+the Government definitely claims and demands the whole
+of Dalmatia, then the agitation is justified; but if the
+Government does not demand it, then we repeat that to
+favour and not to curb the movement is the worst kind
+of Defeatism, for it creates among Italians a state of
+mind tending to transform the sense of a great victory
+into the sense of a great defeat ... quite apart from
+the intransigeance which this provokes in the Yugoslav
+camp." It was in vain. And when Bissolati, having<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+resigned from office on the issue of Italo-Yugoslav relations,
+attempted to explain his attitude at the Scala in
+Milan on January 11, his meeting was wrecked, for
+though the body of the hall and the galleries were relatively
+quiet, if not very sympathetic&mdash;it was a ticket
+meeting&mdash;the large number of subscription boxes, which
+could not be closed to their ordinary tenants, had been
+packed by Bissolati's adversaries, who succeeded in preventing
+him from speaking. After a long delay he
+managed to read the opening passage, but when he
+came to the first "renunciation"&mdash;the Brenner for the
+Teutons&mdash;disturbance set in finally and he left the
+theatre. Afterwards the rioters adjourned to the <i>Corriere</i>
+and <i>Secolo</i> offices, where they broke the windows. And
+thus the first full statement of the war aims of any Italian
+statesman could not be uttered. It was spread abroad
+by the Press. Bissolati claimed to speak in the name of
+a multitude which had hitherto been silent.... The
+masses, he said, demanded, that their rulers should devote
+all their strength to "the divine blessing of freeing mankind
+from the slavery of war." ... "To those," he said,
+"who speak of the Society of Nations as an 'ideology'
+or 'Utopia' which has no hold over our people, we would
+reply: Have you been in the trenches among the soldiers
+waiting for the attack?" [Signor Bissolati had the
+unique record, among Allied or enemy statesmen, of
+having volunteered for active service, though past the
+fighting age, and of having served in the trenches for
+many months before entering the Orlando Cabinet.]</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">A FOUNTAIN IN THE SAND</p>
+
+<p>The speech was an admirable expression of that new
+spirit which the Allies had been fighting for. "Each of
+the anti-German nations," he said, "must guard itself
+against any unconsciously German element in its soul,
+if only in order to have the right to combat any trace
+in others of the imperialism which had poisoned the outlook
+of the German people." With regard to the Adriatic:
+"Yugoslavia exists, and no one can undo this. But to
+the credit of Italy be it said, the attainment of unity and
+independence for the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes was and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+must be alike the reason and the certain issue of our
+War.... Italy felt that if Serbia had been swallowed
+up by that monstrous Empire&mdash;itself a vassal of the
+German Empire&mdash;her own economic expansion and
+political independence would have received a mortal
+blow. And so she was on Serbia's side, first in neutrality,
+then in intervention.... Those who only see, in the
+formation of the Yugoslav State, a sympathetic or antipathetic
+episode of the War, or a subsidiary effect of it,
+have failed to detect its inner meaning." As for the
+Treaty of London which was concluded against the enemy,
+it was not to be regarded as intangible against a friendly
+people. By special grants of autonomy, as at Zadar, or
+by arrangements between the two States, he would see
+the language and culture of all the trans-Adriatic sons of
+Italy assured. He warned his countrymen lest, in order
+to meet the peril of a German-Slav alliance against them,
+they should have to subordinate themselves to France
+and England, and be their prot&eacute;g&eacute;s instead of their real
+Allies&mdash;a situation not unlike that of the Triple Alliance
+when Germany protected them against the ever-imminent
+attack of Austria.... "But perhaps the Yugoslavs
+will not be grateful or show an equal spirit of conciliation?
+Certainly they will then have no vital interests
+to push against Italy, and in the long run sentiments
+follow interests." There was, in fact, throughout the
+speech only one questionable passage, that in which he
+said that "if Italy renounced the annexation of Dalmatia
+she might obtain from Yugoslavia or from the Peace
+Conference the joy of pressing to her heart the most Italian
+city of Rieka, which the Treaty of London renounced."
+This may have been a sop to Cerberus. But Bissolati's
+appeals to justice and to wisdom fell upon the same stony
+ground as his demonstration that Dalmatia's strategic
+value is very slight from a defensive point of view to
+those who possess Pola, Valona and the outer islands.
+There is a school of reasonable Italians, such as Giuseppe
+Prezzolini, who for strategic reasons asked for the isle of
+Vis. Mazzini himself, after 1866, found it necessary,
+for the same reasons, that Vis should be Italian, since it
+is the key of the Adriatic. Some of us thought that it
+might have been feasible to follow the precedent of Port<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+Mahon, which Great Britain occupied without exercising
+sovereignty over the rest of the island of Minorca. The
+magnificent harbour of Vis, perfectly protected against
+the bora, would have satisfied all the demands of the
+Italian navy. Vis is to-day practically as much Slav
+as Minorca was Spanish, and if the Slavs had been left in
+possession of the remainder of that island it would have
+proved the reverse of a danger to the Italians, since with
+a moderate amount of good sense the same relations would
+have existed as was the case upon Minorca.... The
+solution which was ultimately found in the Treaty of
+Rapallo was to allocate to the Italians in complete sovereignty
+not the island of Vis, but the smaller neighbouring
+island of Lastovo.</p>
+
+<p>While the vast majority of Italians would not listen
+to Bissolati they delighted in Gabriele d'Annunzio. The
+great poet Carducci<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> had his heart full when he thought
+about the ragged, starving Croat soldiers, pitiable victims
+of the Habsburgs, exploited by them all their lives and
+fighting for them in a foreign land&mdash;and they fought
+bravely; but as they were often clad in miserable garments,
+they were called by those who wanted to revile
+them "Croat dirt." And that is what they are to
+Gabriele d'Annunzio. When the controversies of to-day
+have long been buried and when d'Annunzio's works are
+read, his lovers will be stabbed by his <i>Lettera ai Dalmati</i>.
+And if the mob had to be told precisely what the Allies
+are, it did not need a lord of language to dilate upon
+"the thirty-two teeth of Wilson's undecipherable smile,"
+to say that the French "drunk with victory, again fly
+all their plumes in the wind, tune up all their fanfares,
+quicken their pace in order to pass the most resolute
+and speedy&mdash;and we step aside to let them pass." No
+laurel will be added to his fame for having spoken of
+"the people of the five meals" [the English] which, "its
+bloody work hardly ended, reopens its jaws to devour
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>as much as it can." All Italy resounded with the catchword
+that the Croats had been Austria's most faithful
+servants, although some Italians, such as Admiral Millo,
+as we shall see, when writing confidentially, did not say
+anything so foolish. Very frequently, however, as the
+Croats noticed, those who had been the most uncompromising
+wielders of Austria's despotism were taken
+on by Italy, the new despot. For example, at Split
+when the mayor and other Yugoslav leaders were arrested
+at the beginning of the War, one Francis Mandirazza
+was appointed as Government Commissary, after having
+filled the political post of district captain (Bezirkshauptmann)
+which was only given to those who were in the
+entire confidence of the Government. As soon as the
+Italians had possession of &#352;ibenik they took him into their
+service.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THOSE WHO HELD BACK FROM THE PACT OF ROME</p>
+
+<p><i>The New Europe</i>, whose directors had taken a chief
+part in bringing the Italians and the Yugoslavs together,
+which congress had resulted in the Pact of Rome, of April
+1918, pointed out that in those dark days of the high-water
+mark of the great German offensive, this Pact&mdash;which
+provided the framework of an agreement, on the
+principle of "live and let live"&mdash;was publicly approved
+of by the Italian Premier and his colleagues, but was
+rejected now when the danger was past and Austria was
+broken up. Those who brought about the Pact reminded
+Italy that she was bound to it by honour and that the
+South Slav statesmen never had withdrawn from the
+position which it placed them in with reference to Italy....
+Everyone must sympathize with the disappointment
+of those gentlemen who&mdash;Messrs. Franklin-Bouillon,
+Wickham Steed and Seton-Watson were associated
+in this endeavour&mdash;had striven for a noble end, had
+achieved something in spite of many obstacles, and now
+saw that one party simply would not use the bridge which
+they had built for it. This party had, however, shown
+such reticence both while the bridge was being made
+and afterwards that one could scarcely be astonished
+at their attitude. The Congress at Rome was in no<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+sense official, but a voluntary meeting of private persons,
+who were got together with a certain amount of trouble.
+So unofficial, in fact, was the Congress that those Serbs
+who worked with the representatives of the Yugoslav
+Committee belonged to the Opposition; the Serbian
+Government, then in Corfu, not giving their adhesion to
+the Congress, which was perhaps a very clever move on
+the part of Pa&#353;i&#263;. Whether it be true or not that Signor
+Amendolla, the General Secretary&mdash;he is the political
+director of the <i>Corriere della Sera</i>&mdash;was asked by the
+Yugoslav Committee not to admit any Serbian deputies
+except those of the Opposition, it appears that no other
+Serbs took a part in the proceedings. The Italian Government
+adopted an ambiguous attitude, for while Orlando
+publicly endorsed the resolutions, as did several other
+Ministers, notably Bissolati, the Premier gave no confirmation
+to those who interpreted his attitude as implying
+the tacit abandonment of Italy's extreme territorial
+claims. Sonnino was so reserved that he took no share
+at all in the Congress and refused to receive the Yugoslavs.
+He made no secret of his determination to exact the
+London Treaty. Nothing was signed by the Italian
+Government; and if Orlando's honour was involved it
+certainly does not seem possible to say the same of
+Sonnino. It may be that Pa&#353;i&#263; foresaw what would
+happen and was therefore unwilling to be implicated.
+He is an astute statesman of the old school&mdash;"too old,"
+says <i>The New Europe</i>, which regards him as an Oriental
+sultan. But respecting the Pact of Rome they were
+rather at issue with the Italians. What the Italians
+gained was that the various clauses of the Pact were used
+as the basis for propaganda in the Austrian ranks on the
+Piave. And when once the Austrian peril had vanished
+the old rancour reappeared, particularly when, by the
+terms of the military armistice with Austria, Italy obtained
+the right to occupy a zone corresponding with
+what she was given by the London Treaty. Whereas in
+that instrument the frontiers were exactly indicated,
+there was in the Pact of Rome no more than a general
+agreement that the principles of nationality and self-determination
+should be applied, with due regard to other
+"vital interests." Bissolati's group was in favour of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+something more definite, but to this Orlando was not well
+disposed; and Trumbi&#263;, the President of the Yugoslav
+Committee, did not avail himself of the, perhaps rather
+useless, offer of some Serbs who were not participating
+in the Congress, but suggested that while he worked with
+the Government they would keep in touch with the
+Bissolati group; even as Bismarck who would work
+openly with a Government, and through his agents with
+the Opposition.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">GATHERING WINDS</p>
+
+<p>As the Serbian Society of Great Britain observed in
+a letter of welcome which they addressed to Baron Sonnino
+on the occasion of a visit to London, they were convinced
+"after a close study and experience of the Southern
+Slav question in all its aspects and some knowledge of
+the Adriatic problem as a whole, that there is no necessary
+or inevitable conflict between the aspiration of the
+Southern Slav people towards complete unity and the
+postulates of Italian national security and of the completion
+of Italian unity; but that, on the contrary, there
+exist strong grounds for Italo-Southern Slav co-operation
+and friendship." The Italian Government, however,
+had now got almost their whole country behind them,
+and in the months after the War so many Italians had
+become warlike that they were enchanted with the picture
+drawn by Gabriele d'Annunzio: "And what peace will
+in the end be imposed on us, poor little ones of Christ?
+A Gallic peace? A British peace? A star-spangled
+peace? Then, no! Enough! Victorious Italy&mdash;the
+most victorious of all the nations&mdash;victorious over herself
+and over the enemy&mdash;will have on the Alps and over her
+sea the <i>Pax Romana</i>, the sole peace that is fitting. If
+necessary we will meet the new plot in the fashion of the
+Arditi [units of volunteers employed on specially dangerous
+enterprises], a grenade in each hand and a knife between
+our teeth." It is true that the other poor little ones of
+Christ, the Franciscans, who are greatly beloved by the
+people of Dalmatia, from whom they are sprung, have
+hitherto preached a different <i>Pax Romana</i>. The Dalmatian
+clergy, who are patriotic, have been rather a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+stumbling-block in the way of the Italians. A very small
+percentage of them&mdash;about six in a thousand&mdash;have been
+anti-national and opportunist. At one place a priest
+whom his bishop had some years ago had occasion to
+expel, returned with the Italian army in November 1918
+and informed the bishop that he had a letter from the
+Pope which reinstated him, but he refused to show this
+letter. He was anxious to preach on the following Sunday;
+the bishop declined to allow him. Then came unto the
+bishop the chief of the Italian soldiery and he said unto
+him: "Either thou shalt permit this man to preach
+or I will cause thine office to be taken from thee." Unfortunately
+the bishop yielded, and the sermon, as one
+would imagine, was devoted to the greater glory of the
+Italians. Sometimes the Italians, since their occupation,
+have made a more humorous if not more successful use
+of the Church. On Palm Sunday, after the service a
+number of peasants, in their best clothes, were walking
+through a village holding the usual palm leaves in their
+hands. They were photographed, and a popular Italian
+newspaper printed this as a full-page coloured illustration.
+It was entitled: "Dalmatian Peasants on their
+way to pay Homage to Admiral Millo."</p>
+
+<p>This policy of a grenade in each hand and a knife
+between the teeth makes a powerful appeal to the munition
+firms. And others who feed the flame of Italo-Slav
+hatred are, as Gaetano Salvemini, the anti-chauvinist,
+pointed out in the <i>Unit&agrave;</i> of Florence, those professional
+gladiators who would lose their job, those agents of the
+Italo-German-Levantine capitalism of the Triest Chamber
+of Commerce who want to be rid of the competition of
+Rieka and think that this can only be obtained by annexation,
+and also those Italian Nationalists who believe that
+the only path to national greatness is by acquiring territory
+everywhere. No light has come to them from the
+East; the same arguments which are now put forward
+by such societies as the "Pro Dalmatia" could be heard
+in Italy before she possessed herself of Tripoli. One
+heard the same talk of strategic necessities; one heard
+that nearly all the population was waiting with open
+arms for the Italians; one heard that from a business
+point of view nothing could be better; one heard that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+the Italians without Tripoli would be choked out of the
+Mediterranean. And what have been the fruits of the
+conquest of Tripoli? No economic advantages have
+been procured, as Prezzolini wrote, no sociological, no
+strategic, no diplomatic benefits. A great deal of money
+was thrown away, a vast amount of energy was wasted,
+and thousands of troops have to be stationed permanently
+in the wilderness. That expedition to Tripoli, which was
+one of the gravest errors of Italian politics, was preceded
+by clouds of forged documents, of absurdities, of partial
+extracts out of consular reports, of lying correspondence
+which succeeded in misleading the Italians.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">WHY THE ITALIANS CLAIMED DALMATIA</p>
+
+<p>"The Italian Government," said the <i>Morning Post</i>,<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>
+"is well qualified to judge of the interests of its own
+people." Here the <i>Morning Post</i> is not speaking of the
+Italian Government which dealt with Tripoli, but that
+which has been dealing with Dalmatia. The reasons
+which have been advanced for an Italian or a partly
+Italian Dalmatia are geographical, botanical, historical,
+ethnical, military, naval and economic. As for the
+geographical reasons: even in the schools of Italy they
+teach that the Italian natural frontier is determined by
+the point of division of the waters of the Alps and that
+this frontier falls at Porto R&eacute;, a few miles to the south of
+Rieka&mdash;everything to the south of that belonging to the
+Balkan Peninsula. We may note the gallant patriotism
+of an Italian cartographer mentioned by Prezzolini;
+this worthy has inscribed a map of Dalmatia down to the
+Narenta with the pleasing words: "The new natural
+boundaries of Italy." As for the argument that the
+flora of Dalmatia resembles that of Italy, this can equally
+well be employed by those who would annex Italy to
+Dalmatia. Historically, we have seen that Venice,
+which held for many years the seacoast and the islands,
+did not alter the Slav character of the country. It is not
+now the question as to whether Venice deserved or did
+not deserve well of Dalmatia, but "the truth is," says
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>M. Emile Haumant,<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> the learned and impartial French
+historian, "the truth is that when Marmont's Frenchmen
+arrived they found the Slav language everywhere, the
+Italian by its side on the islands and the coast, Italian
+customs and culture in the towns, and also the lively
+and sometimes affectionate remembrance of Venice;
+but nowhere did a Dalmatian tell them that he was an
+Italian. On the contrary, they all affirmed that they
+were brothers of the Slav beyond, in whose misfortunes
+they shared and whose successes they celebrated." The
+Italians themselves, in achieving their unity, were very
+right to set aside the undoubted historical claims of the
+Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, those of the House of Este
+and those of the Vatican, seeing that they were in opposition
+to the principle of nationality and the right of a
+people to determine its own political status. With regard
+to the ethnical reasons, we are flogging another dead
+horse, as the statistics&mdash;even those taken during the
+Italian occupation&mdash;prove to the meanest intellect; and
+now the pro-Italians, despairing to make anyone believe
+that the 97&middot;5 per cent. of the people of Dalmatia are
+truly Italians who by some kink in their nature persist
+in calling themselves Slavs, have invented a brand new
+nationality, the Dalmatian, after the classic style of the
+late Professor Jagi&#263; who at Vienna, under the pressure of
+the Austrian Government, began talking of the Bosnian
+language in order not to say that it is Serbo-Croat. He
+was drowned in laughter. With respect to the military
+reasons, the Dalmatian littoral cannot be defended by a
+State which is not in possession of the hinterland. In
+time of peace a very strong army would be needed;
+Italy would, in fact, have to double her army for the
+defence of a frontier 700 kilometres long. And in the
+event of war it would be necessary either to abandon
+Dalmatia or to form two armies of operation, one on the
+frontiers of Julian Venetia, the other in Dalmatia, and
+without any liaison between them. From the military
+point of view it is incomparably more to the interest of
+Italy that she should live on friendly terms with the
+people of the eastern shore of the Adriatic than that she
+should maintain there an army out of all proportion to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>her military and economic resources&mdash;an army which in
+time of war would be worse than useless, since, as M. Gauvain
+observes, the submarines, which would find their
+nesting-places in the islands, would destroy the lines of
+communication. An Italian naval argument is, that if
+she had to fight on the eastern side of the Adriatic her
+sailors in the morning would have the sun in their eyes;
+but the Yugoslavs would be similarly handicapped in the
+case of an evening battle. With regard to the economic
+reasons, the longitudinal lines will continue to guarantee
+to the Germans and Magyars the commercial monopoly
+of the East, and Italy will perceive that she has paid
+very dearly for a blocked-up window. The sole method
+by which Italy can from the Adriatic cause her commerce
+to penetrate to the Balkans is by concluding with a
+friendly Yugoslavia the requisite commercial treaties,
+which will grow more valuable with the construction of
+the lateral railways, running inland from the coast,
+which Austrians and Magyars so constantly impeded.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">CONSEQUENCES OF THE TREATY OF LONDON</p>
+
+<p>If, then, it is difficult to see where the Italian interests
+will be profited by the possession of Dalmatia, there
+remains the argument that, irrespective of the consequences,
+she must have a good deal of it since it was
+allotted to her by the Treaty of London,<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> although
+the engagements entered into by Italy, France and
+Great Britain when they signed the Treaty with
+Germany caused the earlier instrument to be subject to
+revision where its terms had been disregarded. Signor
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>Orlando, in an interview granted in April 1918 to the
+<i>Journal des D&eacute;bats</i>, eagerly insisted that the Treaty
+had been concluded against the Austrian enemy, not
+against the Yugoslav nation; and if this be more than
+a mere phrase it is clear that with the disappearance of
+Austria-Hungary the Treaty automatically fell to the
+ground. By this Treaty of April 1915, France and Great
+Britain are bound&mdash;if necessary, by force of arms&mdash;to
+assist Italy in appropriating what, I believe, will be
+acknowledged to be some one else's country, at all events
+a country the vast proportion of whose inhabitants have
+determined that on no account will they come under the
+Italians. Would it not have been advisable if those
+who signed this document had made a few not very
+recondite researches into eastern Adriatic questions?
+They must have felt some qualms at the cries of indignation
+and amazement which arose when the provisions of
+the Treaty were disclosed, for it did not remain a secret
+very long. They had imagined, on the whole, that as
+Dalmatia had been under alien rulers, Venetian, Austrian
+and so forth, for so many years it really would not matter
+to them very much if they were governed from Vienna or
+from Rome. Perhaps a statesman here and there had
+heard that the Dalmatian Diet had petitioned many times
+since 1870 that they should be reunited to their brothers
+of Croatia and Slavonia in the Triune Kingdom. But all
+the calculations seem to have been made upon the basis
+that Austria-Hungary would survive, as a fairly formidable
+Power at any rate. The union of the Southern
+Slavs was too remote, and the Italians would be kindly
+masters. When the howl of indignation rose, the statesmen
+seem to have conceived the hope that the Italians
+would be generous and wise. The chief blame for the
+Treaty does not rest, however, on the Frenchmen and the
+Englishmen, but on the Russians; it was naturally felt
+that they should be more cognizant of Slav affairs, and
+if they were content to sign the Treaty, France and
+England might well follow their example. When Dr.
+Zari&#263;, the Bishop of Split, saw the former Russian Foreign
+Minister, M. Sazonov, in Paris in the spring of 1919, this
+gentleman was in a state of such dejection that the Bishop,
+out of pity, did not try to probe the matter. "Sometimes,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+said Sazonov, "sometimes the circumstances are
+too much opposed to you and you have to act against
+your inclinations."<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> The French and British statesmen
+gave the Bishop the impression that they were ashamed
+of the Treaty. He read to them in turn a memorandum
+in which he suggested that the whole Dalmatian question
+should be left to the arbitration of President Wilson, who
+was well informed, through experts, of the local conditions.
+And was it, in any case, just that an Italian, both claimant
+and judge, should sit on the Council of Four, to which no
+Yugoslav was admitted? To President Wilson the
+Bishop said, "You have come to fight for the just cause."</p>
+
+<p>The President made no reply.</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop, a native of the island of Hvar, a great
+linguist, was a man who made you think that a very
+distinguished mind had entered the body of the late
+Cardinal Vaughan. To him the most noticeable features
+of the President were the clear brow, the mystic eyes
+and the mouth which showed that he stood firmly on the
+ground.</p>
+
+<p>"You have come to work and fight for the peace,"
+said the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed, to fight," said Dr. Wilson. "And I
+will act with all my energy. You," he said, "you must
+help me."</p>
+
+<p>"I will help you," said the Bishop, "with my prayers."</p>
+
+<p>The Yugoslav Delegation in Paris had, on the authority
+of the Belgrade Cabinet, suggested that the question
+should be arbitrated.</p>
+
+<p>"The Italians have declined the arbitration," said
+Dr. Zari&#263;, "just as in the War Germany and Austria
+declined yours."</p>
+
+<p>The President nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"They have committed many disorders in our fair
+land," said the Bishop.</p>
+
+<p>"I know, I know," said the President.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
+<p>But, it will be asked, why did not Dr. Wilson insist
+on a just settlement of the Adriatic question, taking into
+his own hands that which Mr. Lloyd George and M. Clemenceau
+were so chary of touching? These two statesmen,
+with the London Treaty hanging over them, wanted
+Wilson's assent for matters in which British and French
+interests were more directly concerned, while they required
+Sonnino's co-operation in the Treaty with Germany. It
+would have suited them very well if Wilson had taken
+such energetic steps with Italy that they themselves
+could, suitably protesting to Sonnino, be swept along by
+the presidential righteousness. But Dr. Wilson was
+disappointing those who had&mdash;in the first place because
+of the lofty language of his Notes&mdash;awaited a really great
+man. He was seen to be out of his depth; strenuously
+he sought to rescue his Fourteen Points and to steer the
+Covenant of the League through the rocks and shallows
+of European diplomacy. Sonnino, playing for time,
+involved the good Wilson in a maze of confused negotiations,
+while nearly every organ of Italian official and
+unofficial opinion was defaming the President. On
+April 15 Dr. Wilson in a memorandum suggested the
+famous "Wilson Line" in Istria, which thrust the Italian
+frontier westwards, so that Rieka should be safeguarded
+from the threat of an Italian occupation of Monte Maggiore.
+Italy was to give up northern Dalmatia and all the
+islands, save Lussin and Vis; in return she was to be
+protected by measures limiting the naval and military
+powers of Yugoslavia. When Wilson appealed over the
+head of the Italian Government to the people, their
+passions had been excited to such a degree that much
+more harm was done than good. It is said that he had
+promised Messrs. Lloyd George and Clemenceau that he
+would not publish his letter for three hours, but that&mdash;pride
+of authorship triumphing over prudence&mdash;it was
+circulated to the Press two hours before this time was
+up, and a compromise which had been worked out by Mr.
+Lloyd George had perforce to be abandoned. This was
+one of the occasions when the President's impulsiveness
+burst out through his cold exterior, when his strength of
+purpose, his grim determination to fight for justice were
+undermined by his egotism.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ITALIAN HOPES IN MONTENEGRO</p>
+
+<p>For months the Italians had been consoling themselves
+with the thought that such a hybrid affair as Yugoslavia
+would never really come into existence. Some visionaries
+might attempt to join the Serbs and Croats and Slovenes,
+yet these must be as rare as Blake, who testified that
+"when others see but the dawn coming over the hill, I
+see the sons of God shouting for joy." One only had to
+listen, one could hear already how they were growling,
+how they were quarrelling, how they were killing each
+other. In Montenegro, for example, and Albania the
+Italians were greatly interested&mdash;not always as spectators.
+If you tell a hungry Montenegrin peasant in the winter
+that there is a chance of his obtaining flour and&mdash;well,
+that he may have to fight for it, but he will get good
+booty at Cetinje, he will go there. In January 1919
+there was a battle. "The Montenegrin people rose in rebellion
+against the Serbians to recover their independence,"
+said an Italian writer, one Dr. Attilio Tamaro in a weekly
+paper called <i>Modern Italy</i>, which was published in London.
+"This intensely popular revolt, animated by the heroically
+patriotic spirit of the Montenegrins, was relentlessly
+suffocated in blood. In the little city of Cetinje alone,
+where there are but a few thousand inhabitants, over
+400 were killed and wounded. The Serbians and the
+French together accomplished this sanguinary <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'repression,'">repression.</ins>
+We repeat, it is painful to see the French lend their <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'men.'">men,</ins>
+their blood and their glorious arms to the carrying out of
+the low intrigues of Balkan politics." The money and
+the arms that were found on the dead and captured
+rebels were Italian. If the schemes of the Italians had
+not been upset by the timely arrival of the Yugoslav
+forces, with the few Frenchmen, they would have occupied
+Cetinje and restored the traitor king. As it was, they
+occupied Antivari, from which place they smuggled arms
+and munitions into the country. They conspired with the
+adherents of the old r&eacute;gime, a very small body of men
+who were enormously alarmed at the loss of their privileged
+position. The chief of them was Jovan Plamenac, a
+former Minister whom the people at Podgorica had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
+refused to hear, a few weeks previously, when he attempted
+to address them. He was hated on account of the most
+ruthless fashion in which, as Minister, he had executed
+certain of his master's critics at Kola&#353;in. There was a
+time, during the first Balkan War, when he advocated
+union with Serbia and on April 6, 1916, he wrote in the
+<i>Bosnische Post</i> of Sarajevo that Nikita, owing to his flight,
+"may be regarded as no longer existing." But his unpopularity
+remained and, with vengeance burning in his
+heart, he went from Podgorica to the Italians. They
+concocted a nice plan&mdash;he was to raise an army of his
+countrymen and the Italians would bring their garrison
+from Scutari. On January 1 Plamenac and his partisans
+tried to seize Virpazar, on the Lake of Scutari&mdash;the Commandant
+of the Italian troops at Scutari, one Molinaro,
+had asked the chief of the Allied troops, three days before
+this attempt, whether he might dispatch two companies
+to that place for the purpose of suppressing the disorders
+which had not yet come to pass. Another rising was
+engineered at Cetinje, where twenty or thirty of the poor
+peasants who had let themselves be talked over by Plamenac
+were killed; the rest of the misguided fellows
+were sent home, only their leaders being detained. Plamenac
+himself escaped to Albania.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> On the side of the
+Montenegrin Provisional Government no regular troops
+were available, as the Yugoslav soldiers who had lately
+arrived were engaged in policing other parts of the country.
+Volunteers were needed and a body of young men, mostly
+students, enrolled themselves. They were so busy that
+they omitted to inform Mr. Ronald M'Neill, M.P., that
+they really were Montenegrin students. That indignant
+gentleman insists that they were Serbs, armed with
+French and British rifles, against which, he tells us (in
+the <i>Nineteenth Century</i>, January 1921) the insurgents
+could not do much. Eleven of these volunteers were
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>killed and they were buried underneath the tree where
+Nikita used to administer his brand of justice. All kinds
+of incriminating documents were found upon the dead
+and captured rebels, as also a significant letter from the
+Italian Minister accredited to Nikita, which was addressed
+to the chancellor of the Italian Legation at Cetinje. An
+inter-Allied Commission, over which General Franchet
+d'Esp&eacute;rey presided, issued their report on February 8
+at Podgorica. "All the troops," it said, "in Montenegro
+are Yugoslavs and not Serbs; there are not more than
+500 of them." It further stated that the rebellion had
+been provoked by certain agents of the ex-King, assisted
+by some Italian agents. As for the ridiculous Italian
+charge which I quoted, accusing the French of a share
+in the low intrigues of Balkan politics, this participation
+consisted in their General at Kotor demanding of Darkovi&#263;,
+the leader of the Montenegrin deputies, that his followers
+and the rebels should not come to blows. The reply,
+which annoyed the General, was to the effect that if the
+rebels made an attack, then Darkovi&#263; with his scratch
+forces would defend himself&mdash;and the battle lasted for
+two or three days. A junior French officer, who had been
+in command of a small detachment at Cetinje, told me
+that the noise of firing had awakened him every night
+and he had not the least idea what it was all about. But
+the French had a pretty accurate idea of the nationality
+of the "brigands" who on December 29 fired on the
+<small>ss.</small> <i>Skroda</i> and <i>Satyre</i> near the village of Samouritch
+when it was carrying a cargo of flour up the Bojana for
+the Montenegrins. These vessels were sailing under the
+French flag and the "brigands," about fifty in number,
+were armed with machine guns. An International Commission
+established these facts, as also that the Italian
+ship <i>Vedeta</i> passed up the river just before the outrage
+and the <i>Mafalda</i> just after it, and neither of them was
+molested. In consequence of what occurred and as
+practically all the supplies for Montenegro had at that
+time to be sent by the Bojana, General Dufour, in the
+absence of French troops, authorized the Serbs on
+February 12 to occupy the commanding position of
+Tarabosh.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">WHAT HAD LATELY BEEN THE FATE OF THE AUSTRIANS
+THERE</p>
+
+<p>These Yugoslav troops had been detached from the
+left wing of the Salonica forces and had come overland
+in order to deal with the situation in Montenegro. The
+Austrians had been in a woeful plight; it was regarded
+as a punishment to serve in Montenegro and Albania,
+not only because of the lack of amenities and the unruly
+spirit of the people, but also for the reason that the officers
+who came there&mdash;many managed to avoid it&mdash;were too
+often causes of dissatisfaction. More complaints had
+gone up from this front than from any other. The
+supplies allotted by the High Command in Austria were
+ample, as the Rieka depots testified, but a great deal did
+not reach its proper destination. Some officers took
+down their wives or other ladies, loading up the army
+motor-cars with luxuries of food and grand pianos, while
+the men were forced to tramp enormous distances; if
+anyone fell out, the natives in Albania would emerge
+from where they had been hiding and would deprive the
+wretched man of his equipment and his clothing, and
+perhaps his life. The sanitary section of that Austrian
+army was not good; it happened frequently that victims
+of malaria and wounded men were told to walk&mdash;if they
+arrived, so much the better. These poor fellows did not
+know that if they ultimately got back to Vienna they
+might be the objects of Imperial solicitude&mdash;the least
+to be dreaded was the Archduke Salvator, who was wont
+to come to a hospital, with his wife, and to bestow on
+every man a coloured picture-postcard of their Imperial
+and Royal persons, with a sentence printed underneath
+respecting their paternal and maternal love; it was
+officially reported in Vienna, of another hospital, that
+those who lay there had been spending "happy hours"
+in "the circle of the exalted Family"&mdash;this referred
+to the Archduchess Maria Immaculata, whose compositions
+for the piano are said to be beyond all criticism;
+she herself did not play them, but would sit there while
+they were inflicted by a courtier on the helpless men.
+Not very enviable was the lot of those Magyar officers<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+who were taken to that hospital in Buda-Pest over which
+the Archduchess Augusta, a strikingly ugly woman,
+presided. It was a regulation that no wounds were
+allowed to be dressed until the Archduchess, arrayed in
+uniform and armed with a revolver, made her appearance
+of an evening. The officers were told that it was etiquette
+for them to broach a pleasant conversation with their
+benefactress. But the most dangerous Habsburg was
+the Archduchess Blanka, who was interested in medicine;
+she had thought out for herself a remedy which human
+ailments never would withstand, but which was more
+especially effective in cases of tuberculosis, of malaria
+and of kidney diseases. At the hospital in the Kirchstetterngasse
+she had a ward entirely devoted to kidneys.
+Her treatment consisted in hot bandages of corn-flowers;
+the patients were packed in these bandages and that was
+all that was done to them. With regard to the diet,
+there were no particular regulations. Some of the men
+were sent from there to another and less original hospital,
+but it was often too late.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">AND OF THE NATIVES</p>
+
+<p>The Montenegrins who had been for so long&mdash;some of
+them for three years&mdash;leading a congenial life among their
+rocks, descending now and then to kill an Austrian and
+to gather booty, were most active when the ill-starred
+Imperial army was retiring. Six hundred Austrians,
+for instance, took the road from Kola&#353;in with the intention
+of marching to Lieva Rieka, a distance of 45 kilometres.
+Thirty-five of them arrived there. Thus the population
+avenged such incidents as the hanging by the Austrian
+authorities of the brother of the ex-Minister General
+Ve&#353;ovi&#263;,<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> the General having taken to the hills and his
+brother being executed by way of reprisal. The Austrians
+had now to pay the penalty of ruthlessness; on September
+1, 1917, Count Clam Martini&#263;, the Military Governor,
+issued Order No. 3110 which stated that: "In consequence
+of the recent inquiry having revealed the fact that
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>telegraph and telephone wires have been cut by civilians,
+we make the following order:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"1. Persons caught red-handed in acts of sabotage
+will be summarily shot, their houses will be razed
+to the ground and their property confiscated by the
+Military Administration Authorities.</p>
+
+<p>"2. If the author of the outrage cannot be found,
+the procedure will be as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 10%; text-indent: 0em">"(<i>a</i>) The commune where the act of sabotage
+has taken place will be condemned to a
+heavy fine. If the sum demanded is not
+paid within forty-eight hours, the cattle
+will be seized.</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 10%; text-indent: 0em">"(<i>b</i>) Hostages will be taken who, if the cases of
+sabotage are repeated, will be executed in
+their commune."</p></div>
+
+<p>Life under the Austrians had become unendurable.
+Typhoid fever, marsh fever, typhus and dysentery assumed
+such proportions that in the towns and villages one saw&mdash;apart
+from such notices as Order No. 3110&mdash;no other
+bills posted up on the walls but those containing advice
+as to the correct way of nursing the sick. While poor
+wretches were dying of hunger in the hospitals and on the
+high road for want of bread, the authorities published
+a recipe for the making of wheat-butter, which was a
+recent discovery of German science, reputed to be very
+nourishing for debilitated organisms. But the price of
+a kilo (2 lb.) of wheat was 12 crowns (about 10s.). When
+the epidemic of typhus, which broke out in Cetinje and
+in the Njegu&#353; clan, reached alarming proportions and
+spread to other districts, the medical authorities advertised
+that household effects and linen should be washed with
+water and potatoes. A kilo of potatoes, in the autumn of
+1917, cost a price equivalent to 6s., a quart of oil cost
+&pound;2, 10s., a quart of milk 5s., a kilo of coffee &pound;2, 18s. 4d.,
+a yard of cloth &pound;4, 4s. to &pound;6, 6s., a pair of boots &pound;8, 7s.
+An average of 200 persons&mdash;mainly women and children&mdash;were
+dying every day of starvation.</p>
+
+<p>The Austrian army in retreat was incapable of action.
+It occupied a line east of Podgorica: Bioce-Tuzi-Lake
+of Scutari, with very few guns. The troops were scanty,
+they were weakened by malaria, etc.; but the Italians<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+pursued them with great caution. The chief enemies
+were Albanians and Montenegrins. The wily Austrians
+gave rifles to the Albanians in order that they should
+attack the Montenegrins, but they were often used against
+their former owners. Then the contingents of the
+Salonica army came across the mountains, and when the
+Austrians went north, as best they could, the Yugoslavs
+of the Imperial and Royal army&mdash;Bosniaks were well
+represented&mdash;pinned on their tunics the national colours
+and were greeted by the inhabitants. Arriving at Cetinje
+they heard the incredible news that a Yugoslav State
+had been founded, that the Austrian navy had been
+handed over to the Yugoslavs, that French and Italians
+were already at Kotor. During the journey to that port
+the commanders were depressed, but the rank and file
+rejoiced at the idea of going home. Discipline was at
+an end. Thousands of rockets were fired into the air.
+It was the end of the Habsburg monarchy.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">NOW NIKITA IS DEPOSED</p>
+
+<p>The next thing for the Montenegrins to do was to
+depose Nikita. By a futile proclamation that personage
+had tried in October to resist the union of the Yugoslavs;
+he had made a last desperate attempt to save his crown.
+"I am ready to do," he said, "what my people desires."
+He plaintively protested that all his life had been dedicated
+to their service and now he wanted to go back to
+ascertain precisely what they wished. "Montenegro,"
+he had said, "belongs to a nation of heroes, who fought
+with honour for the highest ideals." But when on
+November 24 the Great National Skup&#353;tina met, and
+when on the 26th it unanimously deposed him&mdash;the old
+gentleman was wise enough to follow the advice of some
+French statesmen and remain where he was. "Here am
+I amongst you, dressed in our beautiful national costume,"
+he said at Neuilly to his supporters, on one of the occasions
+when he denied that he had been a traitor or anything
+so dreadful. But being a prudent old gentleman he refrained
+from uttering these words at Podgorica, where
+the Skup&#353;tina had met; a better plan was to communicate
+with the Press Association, in the hope that many editors<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+would print his words. If it was a final anti-climax for
+a medi&aelig;val prince&mdash;ah well, what is life but one long
+anti-climax? He would protest against the constitution
+of the Skup&#353;tina. He had by no means given his approval
+to the new election laws; and if, contrary to his own
+practice, the gendarmes were having nothing to do with
+the urns, that was merely in order to curry favour with
+the Western Powers. The deputies were chosen by the
+people indirectly&mdash;that is to say, every ten men elected a
+representative, and these in their turn elected the deputies.
+This was not done by ballot, for Montenegro, like Hungary,
+had never known the ballot. An absurd outcry was
+raised by Nikita's band of adventurers and their unhappy
+dupes in this country; they called the world to
+witness this most palpable iniquity on the part of the Serbs,
+whose armed forces had rushed across the mountains,
+and the moment they arrived in Montenegro had so
+overawed the population that this pro-Serb, pro-Yugoslav
+Skup&#353;tina was duly chosen. Go to! Of course it was a
+sad disappointment to Nikita that a Yugoslav instead
+of an Italian army should occupy Montenegro. He had
+telegraphed at the beginning of the War to Belgrade
+that: "Serbia may rely on the brotherly and unconditional
+support of Montenegro, in this moment on which
+depends the fate of the Serbian nation, as well as on any
+other occasion"; and since he knew, without any
+telegram, that Serbia would in her turn support Montenegro&mdash;but
+not the tiny pro-Nikita faction&mdash;he was
+reduced to the appalling straits of a plot to force himself
+upon his own people by means of a foreign army. Now
+the composition of the aforementioned Yugoslav forces
+should be noted&mdash;after more than six years of heroic
+fighting against the Turks, the Bulgars, the Austro-Germans,
+the Albanian blizzards, and again the Bulgars
+and the Austro-Germans there did not survive a very large
+number of the splendid veterans of Marshal Mi&#353;i&#263;, and in
+Macedonia the ranks were filled by Yugoslav volunteers
+from the United States. Many of these Yugoslavs
+(over half of them Dalmatians and Bosnians) were included,
+in the army which entered Montenegro. The
+whole force at the time of the National Skup&#353;tina consisted
+of about 200 men, ten of whom were Serbs from<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+the old kingdom&mdash;and if anyone maintains that 200 men
+could impose their will upon a population of 350,000
+which has arms enough and is skilful in the use of arms,
+he makes it clear that he knows little of the Montenegrins.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE ASSEMBLY WHICH DEPOSED HIM</p>
+
+<p>The Podgorica Skup&#353;tina was not elected by these
+troops. No one will pretend that in the excitement of
+those days the voting was conducted in a calm and
+methodical fashion. Here and there a dead man was
+elected; the proceedings&mdash;though they were not faked,
+as in Nikita's time&mdash;were rough-and-ready. But if the
+deputies had been selected in a more haphazard fashion,
+say according to the first letter of their surnames, the
+result would have been identical&mdash;they would, with a
+crushing majority, have deposed their King and voted
+for the merging of their country in the rest of Yugoslavia.
+If the former Skup&#353;tina had been convoked, as some
+people advocated&mdash;it would have most effectively nonplussed
+the pro-Nikita party here and elsewhere (it might
+even have silenced Mr. Ronald M'Neill, M.P., who asserted<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>
+that this "packed assembly" consisted of "Serbian
+subjects and bought agents in about equal numbers")&mdash;but
+then two-fifths of the country&mdash;those territories
+acquired in the Balkan War&mdash;would not have been
+represented. Observe, however, that the Skup&#353;tina in
+Nikita's time was for union with Serbia. Even then&mdash;although
+of the 76 deputies the king nominated 14,
+while the other 62, of course, were people whom he
+pretty well approved of&mdash;even then they had passed
+resolutions in favour of an economic union, a common
+army and common representatives abroad. The Podgorica
+Parliament had 168 members, of whom 42 were
+from the new areas. The Constitution did not provide
+for such an assembly; but Nikita's friends who clamoured
+for the Constitution evidently had forgotten that under
+Articles 2 and 16 a king who deserts his country and
+people is declared to have forfeited his legal rights.
+Those foolish partisans who cried that it was monstrous
+not to wait until all the interned Montenegrins had come
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>back from Austria and Hungary, may be reminded of
+Nikita's Red Cross parcels which these prisoners had refused
+to take. Moreover, certain of them were elected, after
+their arrival, as vacancies occurred, and they were also
+represented among the dozen deputies whom the Skup&#353;tina
+chose for the Belgrade Parliament. No disorders
+happened during the elections, the best available men
+were chosen&mdash;76 of them having enjoyed a university
+education. It is worthy of remark that while 20 of the
+Podgorica deputies had sat in Nikita's former parliaments,
+another 150 of these ex-deputies survive, and yet out
+of the total number of past and present deputies (<i>i.e.</i>
+over 300), only 15 declared for a kind of autonomy, but
+were in favour of Yugoslav union. The Metropolitan of
+Cetinje, the Bishops and five of the six pre-war Premiers
+gave their unreserved support to the new r&eacute;gime. With
+them was the Queen's brother, the Voivoda Stephen
+Vukoti&#263;, a grand-looking personage who has remained
+all his life a poor man; he was questioned by General
+Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey as to whether he had also voted
+against his brother-in-law. "If I had seven heads and
+on each of them a crown," answered the Voivoda, "I
+would give them all for the union of the Southern
+Slavs." ... Where was the opposition to Yugoslavia?
+"The Black Mountain," said Nikita at Neuilly&mdash;"the
+Black Mountain, as well as her national King, has always
+pursued the same path, the only one leading to the
+realization of our sacred ideal&mdash;that of National Unity."
+One might object that a national King should really not
+have written to his daughter Xenia on October 19, 1918,
+that he would propose a republic for all the Serbs and
+Yugoslavs, with the abdication of the two kings and the
+two dynasties. He added that the Serbs were not ripe
+for a republic, but that in advanced circles his suggestion
+would be enthusiastically received, and in a short time
+he would reap the benefit. "That," he wrote, "is my
+impression&mdash;it may be that I am wrong&mdash;but I do not
+know what else I can do." And a truly national King&mdash;but
+the world, as Sophocles remarked, is full of wonders,
+and nothing is more wonderful than man&mdash;a truly national
+King should not have supported those twenty Montenegrins
+who in the summer of 1919 assembled at the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+monastery of De&#269;ani with the design of establishing a
+Bol&#353;evik republic. Before the Yugoslav troops could
+reach the spot these men were surrounded by Albanians
+and overpowered, so that another wild dream of the old
+intriguer was dissipated.... When Mr. Leiper, the
+<i>Morning Post's</i> acute representative, was in Montenegro
+during the summer of 1920 he found only one person
+in three weeks who pined for the return of Nikita.
+"Presently," he says, "we were accosted by an ancient,
+wild-looking 'pope,' with a face rugged and stormy as
+the crags among which he lived, and long, straggling
+hair tied in behind by an old leather boot-lace.... The
+talk turned to politics. My friend wailed over times
+and morals. Food was scarce, the wicked flourished
+like green bay trees, honest folks were oppressed, starved,
+neglected; for example, his own self that sat before me&mdash;would
+I believe it?&mdash;after forty years' service he had
+not so much as attained the dignity of Archimandrate....
+They were a rascal lot, those at present in power, ripe
+for hanging, every man-jack of them. And oh for the
+days of good King Nicholas, who would have given them
+short shrift!" Mr. Leiper subsequently learned that
+Nikita's panegyrist had spent his life in the wilds of
+Macedonia, where he acted as agent and decoy of the
+then Montenegrin Government. One murder, at least, for
+which he received a good sum of money, could be laid
+to his charge. Now he was living in retirement, hoping
+no doubt for better days, and meanwhile winked at by
+the tolerant authorities.</p>
+
+<p>After the assembling of the Podgorica Parliament a
+proclamation was issued by the joyous Montenegrins at
+Cetinje. "Montenegrins!" it began, "the great and
+bloody fight of the most terrible world war is over!
+Despotism has been smothered, freedom has come, right
+has triumphed.... Montenegrin arms and the heroic
+deeds of our Homeland have distinguished themselves
+for centuries. The fruits of these great deeds and colossal
+sacrifices our people must realize in a great and happy
+Yugoslavia.... Let us reject all attempts which may
+be made to deprive us of our happy future and put us in
+a position of blind and miserable isolation henceforth to
+work and weep in sorrow.... Before us lie two paths.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+One is strewn with the flowers of a blessed future,
+the other is covered with dangerous and impenetrable
+brambles." If any disinterested and intelligent foreigner,
+say a Chinaman, had been asked whether he thought that
+it was more to the advantage of Montenegro that she,
+like Croatia, Bosnia and the rest, should merge herself
+in the Yugoslav State or whether he considered that the
+sort of federation which the ex-King had suggested would
+assist more efficaciously the welfare&mdash;social, economical
+and national&mdash;of the Montenegrin, he would not have
+thanked you for asking so superfluous a question....
+Nikita then asserted that those terrible Serbian bayonets
+had caused the Podgorica Skup&#353;tina to vote as it did.
+Anyone who has spoken to one of those Bocchesi or
+Dalmatian volunteers who were at that time in Montenegro
+will quite believe that they applauded the result, but to
+pretend that they drove the Skup&#353;tina with bayonets to
+do what every reasoning creature would have done is
+so farcical that one might have thought it would not
+even form (as it did form) the subject for questions in
+the British House of Commons.... The only part
+played by bayonets was when on November 7 (one day
+previous to that fixed for the elections) a detachment of
+the Italian army landed at Antivari and another marched
+to within about six kilometres of Cetinje, where they were
+met by the Montenegrin National Guard, were told that
+bigger forces, which it was difficult to restrain, would
+shortly arrive and were given one hour in which to depart.
+Of this they availed themselves, announcing that they
+were all Republicans. They left behind them an elderly
+man who was sick and requested the Montenegrins not
+to murder him. The Italians and Nikita's friends soon
+afterwards spread a report of horrible murders in Montenegro.
+Certain Allied officers went up to investigate
+the matter and found that the charges were baseless.
+They were told by Mr. Gloma&#382;ic, the prefect of Cetinje,
+that the Allies, apart from the Italians, could go anywhere
+in Montenegro, but that the Italians would be opposed
+by force of arms and that if the Allies came up together
+with the Italians, then they too would be attacked.
+Thereupon the Allied officers invited Mr. Gloma&#382;ic to
+lunch.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">NIKITA'S SORROW FOR THE GOOD OLD DAYS</p>
+
+<p>Nikita had no hopes that any good would come from
+such a Skup&#353;tina. In 1912 it had been different; with a
+budget of some 6,200,000 perpers (or francs), including
+the Russian subsidies and the revenues from the Italian
+tobacco monopoly, the royal civil-list comprised 11 per
+cent. of the expenses, while the police accounted for 12 per
+cent., agriculture and commerce 1&frac12; per cent., public works
+4 per cent. and education 5 per cent. The Skup&#353;tina of
+that period had not caused him to pay more attention to
+the people's requirements. The darkness in which they
+lived was so profound that when Montenegro had to pay
+the interest on a six-million-franc loan from Great Britain
+no one in Cetinje could calculate how much was due; a
+telegram was therefore sent to London asking for this
+information and the date when payment should be made.
+If his people did not prevent him from allocating merely
+11,000 francs to the Ministry of Justice for the increase
+of salaries and so forth, while the Ministry of the Interior
+received 700,000 francs for the work of spying, the expense
+of killing people and various propaganda&mdash;both
+these items being labelled "special expenses"&mdash;then
+Nikita had no fault to find with his Skup&#353;tina. Things
+were almost as satisfactory as before 1907, when for the
+first time a budget was issued and the people were told
+how their contributions were spent. The personal
+property of the sovereign had indeed been formally
+separated from that of the State in 1868; but Nikita's
+manipulations were so little supervised that, even when he
+had established the Skup&#353;tina, he could say with truth,
+"L'&eacute;tat c'est moi." The Skup&#353;tina of 1918 was going
+to make vast changes.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE STATE OF BOSNIA</p>
+
+<p>In Bosnia, for some time after the Austrian collapse,
+it was inconvenient to travel. If you went by rail you
+were fortunate if you secured a good berth on the roof of
+a carriage; by road you went less rapidly and therefore
+ran a greater risk of being waylaid by the so-called "Green
+Depot," who were deserters from the Austrian army<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>&mdash;either
+through national or other reasons&mdash;with their
+headquarters in the forests. Some of them were simply
+men who had gone home on leave and stayed at home.
+Here and there a National Guard of peaceful citizens,
+irrespective of nationality, was formed against them.
+But it was some time before they were induced to lead a
+less romantic life. What happened afterwards in Bosnia
+between the Serbs, the Croats and the Moslems was so
+much a matter of routine that the Italians should not
+have run off with the idea that this imperilled Yugoslavia.
+Of the 1,898,044 inhabitants in 1910 the proportions were
+as follows: Orthodox, who call themselves Serbs, 43&middot;49
+per cent.; Moslem, 32&middot;25 per cent.; and Catholics, who
+call themselves Croats, 22&middot;87 per cent. (The remainder
+are miscellaneous persons, such as 850,000 Jews, who speak
+the usual Balkan Spanish; they play an inconsiderable
+part in public life.) The Serbs, the Moslems and the
+Croats are identical in race and language, but have hitherto
+been much divided. Those who joined together in the
+Turkish days were led to do so as companions in distress;
+the rule of Austria, or to speak with greater accuracy
+the rule of Hungary&mdash;no one knew exactly who possessed
+the land, but the Magyars took it for granted that it was
+theirs&mdash;this rule, of course, did nothing to unite the
+various religions. The Moslems, especially after their
+complete isolation from Turkey, were the most favoured,
+while the Serbs, owing to the proximity of Serbia, were
+the most oppressed. And during the War it was the
+Serbian population which was chiefly tortured. Besides
+all those who were dragged away to such places as Arad,
+hundreds and hundreds were hanged in their own province.
+Not satisfied with using, as we see in so many of those
+ghastly photographs, their own army as the executioners,
+the Austro-Hungarians also organized local bands among
+the lower classes of the towns, and in so doing they availed
+themselves of any latent religious fanaticism among the
+Moslems. From the day of the Archduke's assassination
+it was the Serbs who suffered most; and many onlookers
+must have expected in the autumn of 1918 that they would
+take a very drastic revenge. For some weeks the people
+were left very much to their own devices, with no troops
+or police&mdash;the Austrian <i>gendarmerie</i> having to be protected<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+by the better classes, who explained to the peasants that
+it was not right to regard only the uniform of those who
+had so often maltreated them; yet the gendarmes took
+the earliest opportunity of getting into mufti. There was
+also for several months a dearth of detectives. Many of
+those who had worked under Austria and were more or
+less criminal, fled at the collapse; others continued to
+act, but in a half-hearted way. Sixty new detectives
+were taken on by the Yugoslav authorities, and fifty-six
+of them had to be dismissed. After all, if one can judge
+a person's character from his face, the detective who
+allowed you to do so would be so incompetent as not to
+warrant a trial. And after six or seven months of Yugoslav
+administration only thirty-three out of fifty-two detective
+appointments in Sarajevo had been definitely filled.
+So there was not much restriction on the peasants in their
+dealings with each other. A few of them were murdered.
+In Sarajevo the National Guard was largely composed
+of well-meaning street boys; the Serbian troops did not
+arrive until November 6, and in many parts of Bosnia not
+until the end of the month. And yet in the whole country,
+with people on the track of those who in the pay of Austria
+had denounced or murdered their relatives, and with the
+poor <i>kmet</i> at last able to rise against the oppressive landlord,
+there were in the first six months under fifty murders,
+and these were mostly due to the desperate straits of the
+Montenegrins, who came across the frontier in search of
+provisions, during which forays they assassinated various
+people. In the Sandjak of Novi Bazar there was no doubt
+less security; but to anyone who knew, say the Rogatica
+district, under Austria's very capable administration, it
+will seem that Bosnia, after the collapse, was singularly
+tranquil. Anyhow the population, in the summer of
+1919, were living on much more amicable terms with one
+another than for many years. The Government met
+with some criticism, for it was alleged to be reserving all
+the lucrative appointments for the Serbs; one had to
+take into account, however, that it was the Serbs who
+had been chiefly ruined by the War, and it was just that
+the concessions for the sale of tobacco, for the railway
+restaurants and so forth, should be, for the greater part,
+given to them. Nevertheless it may interest travellers<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+to know that the restaurateurs at the stations of Ilid&#382;e
+and Zenica are Catholics&mdash;the Moslems are not yet very
+competent in such affairs. They are, as their own leaders
+sadly confess, the least cultured and the least progressive
+class. As elsewhere in Islam there has been a total lack
+of female education&mdash;the mothers of the Sarajevo Moslem
+<i>intelligentsia</i> can neither read nor write, while their sons
+are cultivated people who speak several languages. A
+change is being made&mdash;there are already five Moslem lady
+teachers employed in the mixed Government schools;
+this a few years ago would have been thought impossible.
+It is to be deplored that these divisions into Moslem
+and Orthodox and Catholic should be perpetrated&mdash;the
+Moslem leaders look forward to the time, in a few years,
+when their deputies will no longer group themselves
+apart on account of their religion; but it is unwise to
+introduce too many simultaneous innovations, considering
+that the illiterates of Bosnia number about 90 per cent.
+of the population. The Yugoslav idea will prosper in
+this country; and, by the way, while you meet an occasional
+Serb who hankers for a Greater Serbia, an occasional
+Croat who would like a Greater Croatia, the Moslems have
+no aspirations save for Yugoslavia. [They speak of "our
+language," since the word "Serbian" has for them too
+much connection with the Orthodox religion, the word
+"Croatian" with Roman Catholicism.] They are not
+indifferent to the fact that to their own 600,000 in Bosnia
+they will add the 400,000 of Macedonia and Old Serbia,
+together with the 200,000 of Montenegro and the Sandjak....
+One was inclined to think that the least desirable
+person of the new era in Sarajevo was the editor of the
+<i>Srpski Zora</i> ("Serbian Dawn"); his methods had a resemblance
+to those of Lenin, for he printed lists of persons
+whom he called upon the Government to prosecute, and
+when he was himself invited to appear in court and answer
+to some libel charges he declined to go, upon the ground
+that the laws were still Austrian and the judge a Magyar.
+He disapproved of such tolerance, he disapproved of the
+Croats because they declined to recognize that the Serbs
+had more merit than they, and as for Yugoslavia&mdash;it was
+a thing of emptiness&mdash;he laughed at it and called it Yugovina,
+the south wind. The only chance of life it had was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+if you left the whole affair to the Serbs and then in two
+years it would be a solid thing. It may be thought that
+the local Government, since they left him at large, endorsed
+his theories; but they were reluctant to give him
+a halo of martyrdom. They imagined that he was nervous
+because he was losing ground&mdash;they acknowledged,
+though, that he still gave pleasure to a great many Serbs,
+who were carried away by his appeals to their old prejudices.
+It is undeniable that with the peculiar traditions
+and customs of Bosnia, that province must for some
+years have a Government&mdash;whatever method is evolved
+for the other parts of Yugoslavia&mdash;whose eyes are not
+turned constantly to Belgrade. It might even be well
+to set up a local Chamber in which all classes would be
+represented. The Moslems and Croats would thus lose
+any lurking fear that they were being swamped, and by
+coming into contact with other political parties even the
+less cultured classes would gradually tend to discard
+these fatal religious, in favour of political, divisions. A
+somewhat primitive Balkan community cannot be expected
+of its own accord to love henceforward in the name of
+politics those whom hitherto it has hated in the name of
+religion. And as yet they are much more interested in
+the harvest than in politics; from day to day they change
+their views, according to the views of the last orator
+from Belgrade, Zagreb or Ljubljana. Only the Socialists
+appear to be well disciplined. Of course the present
+political parties in Yugoslavia are not wholly free from religious
+prejudices, an important party, for example, among
+the Slovenes being based on Roman Catholicism. But
+as the Slovenes are, as yet, the best upholders of the
+Yugoslav idea, it is obvious that education covers all
+things, and that with the increase of education in Bosnia
+the religious differences will be less important. Anything
+that can be done against this tyranny is beneficial, whether
+the St. George be a political orator or a schoolmaster.
+And as the effects produced by the former are more rapid,
+so should he be encouraged. He is, in fact, appearing
+in Bosnia, he will carry away, more or less, the <i>client&egrave;le</i>
+of the <i>Srpski Zora</i>, and the shattered nervous organism
+of its editor, Mr. &#268;okorilo, will be, one trusts, reconstituted
+and devoted, as it can be, to a nobler purpose.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+One of its deplorable effects has been that the organ of
+the Croat party, a paper called <i>Jugoslavija</i>, has been
+compelled to write in a similar strain, whereas the editor,
+a dapper little priest, assures one that he would prefer
+a more elevated tone.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">RADI&#262; AND HIS PEASANTS</p>
+
+<p>Those who wished that Yugoslavia would be an idle
+dream have had their hopes more centred in Croatia.
+They told the world that horrible affairs took place, that
+there has been a revolution, several revolutions, that
+castles have been sacked and that the statesman, Radi&#263;,
+was imprisoned. If you met this little pear-shaped man,
+who is a middle-aged, extremely short-sighted person,
+with a small, straggling beard, an engaging smile and a
+large forehead, you would say that surely he had spent
+a good many hours of his life in some university garden
+where the birds, knowing that he could not easily see
+them, were in the habit of alighting for their dinner on
+his outstretched hands. He is a very learned little man,
+who started his career by obtaining the first place at the
+famous &Eacute;cole des Sciences Politiques in Paris. But
+Stephen Radi&#263; happens also to be very much interested in
+politics and extremely impulsive, so that his wife and
+daughter have often had to look after the bookshop,
+since the Government&mdash;that of Austria-Hungary and
+afterwards that of Yugoslavia&mdash;had consigned him to
+prison. He probably expected nothing else, for his eloquence&mdash;and
+he is an orator in several languages&mdash;has
+frequently carried him along and swept him round and
+round, like a leaf, not only in a direction opposite to that
+which he previously travelled but flying sometimes in
+the face of the most puissant and august authorities.
+So, for example, he began to agitate in 1904 against the
+vast territorial possessions of the Church in Croatia.
+This resulted in the then Archbishop issuing an interdict
+against him and his meetings&mdash;a measure which, I believe,
+is still in force. He was described as Antichrist, with
+the consequence that his audiences, out of curiosity to see
+what such a personage might look like, became larger
+than ever. For many years he was the only Croat politician<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+who gave himself the trouble to go amongst the peasants.
+"In politics," said Radi&#263; to me&mdash;he said a great many
+other things in the course of our first conversation, which
+lasted for four hours, though it seemed a good deal shorter&mdash;"In
+politics," said he, "one should not, as in art, try
+to be original. One should interpret not only the living
+generation but the ancestors." The peasant, who feels
+what Radi&#263; expresses, has repaid him well, for there is
+now no party in Yugoslavia which is more devoted to its
+leader. He has taken the place once occupied by the
+clergy&mdash;he is by no means hostile to the Roman Catholic
+Church, but he is the foe of clericalism. "Praised be
+Jesus Christ! Long live the Republic!" is the usual
+beginning of one of his orations, so that his enemies accuse
+him in the first place of being a hypocrite, and in the second
+of holding views which cannot possibly amalgamate
+with those of monarchical Serbia. But the reference to
+Christ appears perfectly natural to the Croat peasant&mdash;at
+an open-air meeting of 10,000 of them I saw their heads
+uncovered, and all bowed in prayer for a few minutes on
+the stroke of noon. As for the Republic, this first came
+into the picture on July 25, 1918, when the cry was raised
+at a meeting of the Peasants' party. A large number of
+peasants had imbibed this idea in America&mdash;those who
+emigrated have been in the habit of returning, and even
+if their home is in the desolate parts of Zagorija or among
+the rocks of Primorija, the coastal region. And thousands
+of Croats had spent part of the War as prisoners in Russia&mdash;having
+deserted from the Austro-Hungarian army&mdash;so
+that they had seen how the Great White Tsar, previously
+regarded as an almost divine being, could be dethroned.
+Four months after this famous meeting a Convention
+was held, in the American fashion, with 2874 delegates,
+who represented some 100,000 people. They pronounced
+themselves to be Republicans and Yugoslavs. It is quite
+true that many of the farmers in Croatia have a pretty
+vague idea of the Republic. "Long live Mr. Republic!"
+has been heard before now at one of their meetings, while
+a landowner of my acquaintance was asked by two of his
+aged tenants whether in the event of this Republic being
+established they should choose as President King Peter
+or the Prince-Regent or King Charles. But we should<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+remember that in 1907 a printing press was founded by
+the Peasants' party at Zagreb, and those who gave their
+money for this cause were, to a great extent, illiterate.
+The people are groping towards the light, and they are
+willing to be told by those they trust that they have much
+to learn as to the nature of the light. Republicanism was
+fanned into flame by Radi&#263;'s imprisonment and other
+causes, so that he says he is uncertain whether he can
+now persuade them to modify their demands. But if
+he tells them that in his opinion a constitutional monarchy
+will meet the case, they will probably still consent to
+accept his view&mdash;and this has of late come to be his
+own opinion. It may very well be that he adopted the
+republican idea with no other purpose than to obtain
+for the peasants the social and economic legislation which
+they would otherwise not have secured. And, after all,
+there was something of a republican nature in Croatia's
+autonomy under the Magyars. As for his imprisonment,
+it was strange that the Belgrade Cabinet, who should
+have known their man, treated him as if he were a De
+Valera; and perhaps the conduct of a subsequent Cabinet,
+that of Mr. Proti&#263;, who came out for Croatian Home
+Rule, was also strange in appearance, for while Radi&#263;
+was still in prison he was invited to decide as to whether
+the Ban, Croatia's Governor, should or should not remain
+in office. But Mr. Proti&#263; understood that at this period
+Radi&#263;'s republicanism was somewhat academic.</p>
+
+<p>His party had, in years gone by, been small enough
+in the Landtag; but the fact that his followers then
+numbered only two is anyhow of no importance, as his
+very real power was derived from the peasants, who were
+largely voteless. How often in his prison he must have
+yearned for those old Landtag days&mdash;apart from his
+advocacy of the peasants, he loves to speak. In two hours
+he would traverse the whole gamut of human thought,
+expressing opinions to which John Hampden and Jack
+Cade and Montaigne and Machiavelli would in turn
+assent. The words used to rush from his lips in a torrent,
+while to many of his faithful peasant followers he seemed,
+throughout his discourse, to be in direct contact with the
+Almighty. Next to the Almighty the Croatian peasant
+had been taught to revere Francis Joseph, so that when the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
+heir to the throne was murdered in 1914 it was not very
+difficult to make the Croat peasants rise against this
+sacrilege by plundering the Serbian shops at Zagreb&mdash;Austrian
+officers coming with their children to look on&mdash;just
+as in other parts of Croatia and Bosnia. There is as
+yet within the Croat peasant a certain hostility against the
+Serb and for various reasons: one of them is that he was
+always taught by Austria to detest the adherents of the
+Orthodox religion, another reason is that for centuries
+they have had a different culture; and so, since Austria's
+collapse, when it has been explained to them what is a
+republic and what is a monarchy, they have often demanded
+the former for no better reason than that the
+Serbs prefer the latter. They were taught by Austria to
+look forward to a Greater Croatia, which would eliminate
+the Slovenes by delivering them to the Germans, for that
+celebrated corridor to the Adriatic. And it is from the
+Slovene Socialists that the peasants of Croatia might very
+profitably learn.... The Slovene influence, coming
+from a more highly organized province, would be beneficial
+both for Serbs and Croats, for the industrial workers and
+for the peasants. The nature of the Southern Slavs, say
+these Socialists, is democratic, and the State mechanism
+might be made more so. Now that the various parts of
+Yugoslavia have liberated or are liberating themselves
+from various yokes, they have approached one another
+with a different mentality; they will become much better
+known to one another. And it was hoped that when Mr.
+Radi&#263; regained his freedom and his book-shop he would
+find that his devotees preferred to hear him not as a
+Croat Jack Cade but as a Yugoslav Hampden. In his
+absence the party was leaderless.</p>
+
+<p>As for the other Croats, only Frank's Clerical party,
+which numbered five or six deputies, and did not hide its
+persistent sympathies with the House of Habsburg, kept
+up Separatist tendencies. All the Coalition (now the
+Democrat) party and two-thirds of the so-called Party of
+Croatian Right were for a close union with Serbia and the
+regency of Prince Alexander. That is not to say that there
+was perfect unanimity with regard to the interior arrangements
+of this union; in fact Dr. Ante Paveli&#263;, one of the
+Vice-Presidents of the Yugoslav National Council, who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+was received in special audience by the Prince at Belgrade,
+is also the leader of the old Star&#269;evi&#263; party and as such an
+opponent of complete centralization. The <i>Obzor</i>, Zagreb's
+oldest newspaper, maintains this point of view, not paying
+much attention to the form of the State, monarchic or
+republican, so long as it is organized in a manner which
+would prevent the Croats being subordinated. Zagreb,
+it thinks, is destined to play the New York to Belgrade's
+Washington&mdash;but nowadays it looks very much as if
+Zagreb's r&ocirc;le were to be that of Yugoslavia's Boston.</p>
+
+<p>Among the Slovenes this anxiety for decentralization&mdash;which
+is very proper or exaggerated, according to the
+point of view&mdash;is less accentuated. It appears as if the
+Christian-Socialist party of Monsignor Koro&#353;ec<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> is rather
+centralist in its Belgrade words and decentralist in its
+Ljubljana deeds. This party has shed some of its extremist
+clerical members, who to the cry, "The Church is
+in danger!" were very good servants of the Habsburgs.
+Such of them as were unable to accept the new order of
+things&mdash;elderly priests, for the most part&mdash;retired from
+the political stage.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THOSE WHO WILL NOT MOVE WITH THE TIMES</p>
+
+<p>There remains the Voivodina (Banat, Ba&#269;ka, etc.) party,
+some of whom are as much frightened of Croat predominance
+as the <i>Obzor</i>, for instance, is of Serb. The
+argument of these Voivodina politicians is that Serbia has
+lost so many of her <i>intelligentsia</i> during the War that she
+must have special protection; they also found it hard to
+swallow the old functionaries whom the State took over
+from Austria. Of course it does not follow that if a Slav
+has been a faithful servant of Austria he will be an unsatisfactory
+servant of the new State. Obviously the
+circumstances of each case must be considered; and, as a
+barrister, a dissentient member of this party told me at
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>Osiek, one must often put personal feelings aside; he
+himself had been arbitrarily imprisoned during the War
+by an official who was then an Austrian and is now a
+Yugoslav functionary. The most extreme exponent of
+this anti-Croat party seems to be a well-known editor at
+Novi Sad, Mr. Ja&#353;a Tomi&#263;. In his opinion you cannot
+join by means of a law in twenty-four hours people who
+have never been together; let it be a slower and a surer
+process. He is ready to die, he says, but he is not ready
+to lose his national name. Let the Serbs and Croats and
+Slovenes retain what is most precious to each of them.
+Let them not be asked to give up everything. In the
+matter of the flag Mr. Tomi&#263; is justified, for now their
+former flag has been taken from each of them and a totally
+fresh one created, which is particularly hard on the Serbs
+after the sublime fashion in which their old colours were
+carried up the Macedonian mountains in the Great War.
+It would not have required much ingenuity&mdash;as they all
+three share the colours, red, white and blue, differently
+arranged&mdash;to have devised, not a mere new and unmeaning
+arrangement of the simple colours, but a method on the
+lines of the Union Jack or of the former Swedish-Norwegian
+flag, wherein all three would have remained visible. Mr.
+Tomi&#263; believes that a real <i>intelligentsia</i> would demand of
+the people what it can execute, and he regrets to think
+that at least two-thirds of the <i>intelligentsia</i> want the
+people to call themselves Yugoslavs. But Mr. Tomi&#263;
+has a far greater majority than two-thirds against him,
+because while his arguments would be admirable if the
+Serbs and Croats and Slovenes had no neighbours, they
+must be&mdash;and the vast majority of Yugoslavs feel that they
+must be&mdash;superseded on account of this imperfect world.
+By all means let each one of the three retain every single
+custom that will not interfere with the national security
+and will not interfere too much with the national welfare.
+If Mr. Tomi&#263;, who is much respected but generally looked
+upon as rather old-fashioned, is going to die sooner than
+give up something which the State considers essential he
+will be following in the footsteps of those whom Cavour,
+in the course of the welding of Italy, had to execute.</p>
+
+<p>It may be said without fear of contradiction&mdash;in fact
+I was given the figure by one of the decentralization leaders<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+of Croatia&mdash;that at least 90 per cent. of the Croat <i>intelligentsia</i>
+wants the union with Serbia, and if a republic is
+decided upon they will mostly vote for King Alexander
+as President. While they discuss their internal organization&mdash;no
+simple matter when one considers their varied
+antecedents, their different legal systems and so forth&mdash;they
+will not let Yugoslavia go to pieces. The work of
+construction and of more or less strenuous, but necessary,
+criticism occupies by far the greater number of the
+politicians. They have not yet, all of them, given their
+adherence to this or that group, while new groups are
+arising&mdash;such as the Agrarian, which being far more
+interested in the peasant's material welfare than in anything
+else will give their alliance to that political party
+which is prepared to assist the villages towards improving
+their cleanliness and their manure.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE YUGOSLAV POLITICAL PARTIES</p>
+
+<p>The chief parties which in the new State's first two
+years evolved themselves out of those that previously
+existed in the various parts of Yugoslavia were:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>(<i>a</i>) the Pa&#353;i&#263; party, consisting chiefly of the
+Serbian Old Radical party, together with Serbian
+parties from the Voivodina and Bosnia.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>b</i>) the Pribi&#269;evi&#263; party, consisting chiefly of the
+Croatian Coalition party, together with the Slovene
+Liberal party and the Serbian parties in opposition
+to Pa&#353;i&#263;.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>c</i>) the Christian Socialist party, under Koro&#353;ec,
+consisting chiefly of Slovenes, together with a young
+group in Croatia and other Clerical groups that are
+forming in Dalmatia and Bosnia.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>d</i>) the Star&#269;evi&#263; party, under Paveli&#263;, consisting
+of decentralizing parties in Croatia and Slavonia, and
+some Croats in Bosnia.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>e</i>) Socialists:</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 1em">(1) the Slovene non-communistic Socialists.</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 1em; padding-left: 4em; text-indent: -3em">(2) Korac's party, chiefly from Slavonia and
+Serbia. This remarkable man, whose
+mind floats serenely in a body that is
+paralysed, has twice been included in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
+Cabinet. By many he is looked upon as
+too subversive, but he believes that a
+revolution will come unless his department
+acts in a revolutionary fashion.
+His programme includes old-age pensions
+from the age of sixty&mdash;the people being
+now enfeebled by the wars&mdash;and obligatory
+insurance with regard to all those, including
+State employees in the railway
+service and the post office, who do not
+enjoy an independent existence, half the
+insurance being paid by the employer and
+half by the employee, while with regard
+to accidents the whole would be paid by
+the employer. He has also very firm
+ideas for the safeguarding of the human
+dignity of the pensioners.</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 1em; padding-left: 4em; text-indent: -3em">(3) Dr. Rado&#353;evi&#263;'s party. This gentleman was
+said to adore Lenin, on whom he lectured.
+His party had no strength except such
+as it derived as a protest against any
+forced centralization.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>f</i>) Republican party, consisting of 90,000 Croat
+peasants under Radi&#263;.</p></div>
+
+<p>Of these by far the most important were the first two.
+In Serbian political parties the personal question used to
+be nearly always uppermost, and now, in the case of
+parties (<i>a</i>) and (<i>b</i>), it was most difficult to understand
+what aims the one had which the other did not share.
+One may say that each of them was a group under a wily
+politician who was able, not only to forge out of various
+elements a homogeneous group, but to persuade them
+that there was a fundamental difference between their
+group and any other. Here one has not so much the
+Western system, under which a man enters a Cabinet as
+the exponent of party principles, but the Eastern system
+under which a Minister uses his influence to found a
+party, which is based inevitably on the disappearing
+relics of the past. In the spring of 1919 many foreign
+observers fancied that new parties were surging up like
+mushrooms and proving, no doubt, that the people's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+vitality was strong, although one would have waited
+willingly for this evidence until the country's external
+and internal affairs were more settled. As a matter of
+fact these rather numerous parties, of which the outside
+world now heard for the first time, had been in existence
+or semi-existence for years. There was, however, a
+certain bewildering vacillation on the part of some of the
+deputies. The Bosnian Moslems, for instance, could not
+make up their minds whether they would be Serbs or
+Croats and belong to (<i>a</i>) or (<i>b</i>). Finally most of them
+settled down in (<i>b</i>), while two others formed an independent
+group. It must be remembered that they, like
+all the other deputies, were not really deputies but delegates,
+since it was not yet possible to hold elections.
+There would naturally be many changes after the first
+General Election; for one thing, the Moslems intend to
+join in one group with their brethren from Macedonia and
+Novi Bazar.... As we shall see, later on, the changes
+produced by the first General Election&mdash;which was
+the election held in November 1920, for the Constituent
+Assembly&mdash;were extremely sweeping. While the
+Radicals and Democrats returned with close on one
+hundred members each, the Koro&#353;e&#263; party met with
+comparative disaster, and the Star&#269;evic group was overwhelmed.
+With about fifty members apiece, the Communist
+and the Radi&#263; parties gave expression, roughly
+speaking, to the discontent produced by the unsettled
+conditions&mdash;unavoidable and avoidable&mdash;of the new
+State's first two years. The Moslems came back with
+nearly thirty members, and a healthy phenomenon for a
+country in which the peasant so largely predominates
+was the success, apart from the Radi&#263; Peasant party, of
+the Agrarians with some thirty deputies, and the Independent
+Peasant party with eight.</p>
+
+<p>The Italian Press disposed in five lines of the historical
+Act of Union which occurred when the delegates of the
+Yugoslav National Council were received by the Prince
+at Belgrade on December 1, 1918. In the address, which
+was read by Dr. Paveli&#263;, it is recorded that "the National
+Council desires to join with Serbia and Montenegro in
+forming a United National State of Slovenes, Croats and
+Serbs, which would embrace the whole inseparable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+ethnographical territory of the South Slavs.... In the
+period of transition, in our opinion, the conditions should
+be created for the final organization of our United State."
+And there is a dignified protest against the Treaty of
+London and the Italian encroachments which even went
+beyond that which the treaty gave them. In his reply
+the Prince, among other remarks, said that "in the name
+of His Majesty King Peter I now declare the union of
+Serbia with the provinces of the Slovenes, Croats and
+Serbs in an indivisible kingdom. This great moment
+should be a reward for the efforts of yourselves and your
+brothers, whereby you have cast off the alien yoke.
+This celebration should form a wreath for the officers
+and men who have fallen in the cause of freedom....
+I assure you and the National Council that I shall always
+reign over my brothers and yours, and what constitutes
+the Serbs and their people, in a spirit of brotherly love....
+The first task of the Government will be to arrange
+with your help and that of the whole people that the
+frontiers should comprise the whole nation. In conjunction
+with you I may well hope that our powerful
+friends and Allies will be able justly to appreciate our
+standpoint, because it corresponds with the principles
+which they themselves have proclaimed and for the
+achievement of which streams of their precious blood
+have been poured out...." The Prince spoke of Italy
+in phrases to which we have already alluded.<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> He
+reminded her of the Risorgimento and of the principles
+with which her great sons had then been inspired. But
+the Italian Press preferred to moralize in column after
+column on the variety of the political groups of Yugoslavia,
+with the object of showing to the world that they
+were a people of no cohesive capacities and of no real
+national consciousness.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE SLOVENE QUESTION</p>
+
+<p>This matter of the frontiers had been very lucidly set
+before the Allies with regard to Dalmatia and Rieka; it
+now remained for the Slovenes to formulate their case.
+From the statement given by Dr. Trumbi&#263; to the Council
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>of Ten in Paris we will take these extracts: "The province
+of Gorica-Gradi&#353;ca may be divided into two different
+parts, both from an ethnical and economic point of
+view. The western part, up to the line Cormons-Gradi&#353;ca-Monfalcone,
+is economically self-supporting. If
+we estimate the population on a language basis, there are
+about 72,000 Italians and 6000 Slovenes. Geographically
+it is simply the prolongation of the Venetian plain.
+We do not claim this territory called Friuli, which belongs
+ethnologically to the Italians. The rest of this province
+to the east and the north of the Cormons-Gradi&#353;ca-Monfalcone
+line, which comprises the mountainous region,
+is inhabited by 148,500 Slovenes and 17,000 Italians, of
+whom 14,000 are in the town of Gorica, where they
+constitute half the population.... The Slovenes are
+an advanced and civilized people, acutely conscious of
+their racial solidarity with the other Yugoslav peoples.
+We therefore ask that this district should be reunited to
+our State.... Istria is inhabited by Slavs and Italians.
+According to the latest statistics, there were in it 223,318
+Yugoslavs and 147,417 Italians. The Slavs inhabit
+central and eastern Istria in a compact mass. More
+Italians live on the western coast, particularly in the
+towns. They inhabit only five villages north of Pola,
+and their populations have no territorial unity. Istria
+is territorially linked with Carniola and Croatia, whereas
+it is separated from Italy by the Adriatic, and therefore
+it ought to belong to the Yugoslav State.... Triest and
+its neighbourhood is geographically an integral part of
+purely Slav territories. The majority of this town&mdash;two-thirds,
+according to statistics&mdash;is Italian and the
+rest Slav. These statistics being on the language basis,
+include Germans, Greeks, Levantines, etc., as Italian-speaking,
+among the Italians. The Slav element plays
+an important part in the commercial and economic life
+of Triest. If the town were ethnically in contact with
+Italy we would recognize the right of the majority. But
+all the hinterland of Triest is entirely Slav. Yet the
+commercial and maritime value of Triest is what chiefly
+counts, and it is a port of world trade. As such it is the
+representative of its hinterland, which stretches as far as
+Bohemia, and chiefly of its Slovene hinterland, which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+forms a third of the whole trade of Triest and is inextricably
+linked with it. Should Triest become Italian it
+would be politically separated from its trade hinterland,
+and would be prejudiced in a commercial respect. Since
+Austria has crumbled as a State, the natural solution
+of the problem of Triest is that it should be joined to our
+State."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE SENTIMENTS OF TRIEST</p>
+
+<p>It would be futile to talk of Triest without considering
+the relations between Italians and Germans. We have
+seen already how at the elections they combined against
+the "common enemy." But in commerce the Germans
+were in need of no alliance, for the Italians have relatively
+so little capital to dispose of that they were unable to
+keep the Germans from attaining that very dominant
+position in Italy. As the Italians have, as a general
+rule, a lack of initiative and enterprise with respect to
+modern industry, it was to German efforts that the great
+industrial and commercial awakening of Italy and of
+Triest were largely due. In that town the Italians were
+principally agents; and it is to be feared that if it
+ultimately falls into their hands it will become a
+German town under the Italian flag. It would be the
+object of the Italians to emancipate Austria from the
+Yugoslavs, giving them an outlet to Triest over Italian
+territory; and it would be to the Italian advantage if
+Austria were joined to Germany. Therefore it is preferable
+for all the Allies, except the Italians, that
+Triest should be international. Conditions could then
+be offered to the Austrians that would cause them to
+prefer these rather than to join themselves to Germany.
+But, in the opinion also of many enlightened Italians,
+it is not in that country's interest that she should hold
+Triest. Apart from the older publicists and statesmen,
+including Sonnino, who might wish to modify their
+opinions, one of the best-informed writers on Triest and
+Istria, A. Vivante, a native of Triest, in his <i>L'irredentismo
+adriatico</i> (1912) is a most determined adversary to an
+Italian occupation of Istria or Triest; his book has been
+withdrawn from circulation by the Italian Government.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+Other resolute opponents have been all the inhabitants
+of Triest, except the extreme Nationalists. The town's
+prosperity dated from the time when the Habsburgs
+were driven out of Italy. Triest has not forgotten what
+occurred when she and Venice were under the same
+sceptre; and this it was which brought about, at Austria's
+collapse, the autonomous administration in which practically
+all the elements of the town participated. Only
+the Irridentists then thought that Triest's liberation need
+involve union with Italy and economic separation from
+the hinterland on which it depends.... When the
+occupation started, in November 1918, the Chief of the
+Italian police summoned before him the members of the
+Yugoslav National Council of Triest. Only two of them
+answered the summons, whereupon a lieutenant read
+them the following order from the Italian Governor:
+"In view of the fact that the Italians troops have occupied
+the line of demarcation and that traffic over this line is
+suspended for the former Austro-Hungarian Monarchy,
+it is ordered that, for strategical reasons, the South Slav
+National Council in Triest be dissolved and its offices
+closed." The Slovenes demanded a copy of this order,
+which, however, was refused. They were not allowed to
+depart until the books and national emblems had been
+removed from the premises of the National Council, the
+doors sealed and a guard stationed. "We others,
+Italians," an Italian writer had said in the <i>Edinost</i>, the
+Slovene paper of Triest, on August 18, 1918, "should
+understand that if we want our freedom we must see
+that this is likewise given to our neighbours." And the
+<i>Mercure de France</i> of October remarked that these wise
+words would be listened to at Rome. In the realm of
+navigation the Italians were not idle. They started at
+once to negotiate with the Austrians for the sale to themselves
+of the Lloyd Steamship Company, the Austro-Americana
+and the Navigazione Libera, the three largest
+Austrian companies. By the end of February 1919, a
+Mr. Ivan &#352;vegel related in a well-informed article,<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> the
+Italians had, by acquiring a large portion of their shares,
+obtained the decisive influence in these companies. The
+deal which was carried through with the assistance of the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>Austrian Government and which, according to the
+<i>Neue Freie Presse</i> of February 22, "fully satisfied the
+needs of Austrian commerce," was transacted during
+the Armistice and behind the back of public opinion.
+Surely the Austrian mercantile marine, to which the
+Yugoslavs contributed the majority of the personnel
+and which they, with the other nationalities of the late
+Empire, helped to build up with the aid of considerable
+subsidies, should not have been permitted to fall an easy
+prize into the lap of Italy, but ought rather to constitute
+an asset in the liquidation of the late Austrian State and
+a subject of public discussion.... In consequence of
+the Italian attitude towards Austria on the one hand
+and the Slovenes on the other, the Austrians made
+an attack from northern Carinthia near Christmas and
+despoiled the Slovenes of about half the territory they
+had occupied. An American mission asked both sides
+to cease from hostilities, saying that the question of
+frontiers would be decided by Paris in a few weeks. Two
+Americans, who unfortunately could speak neither German
+nor Slovene, motored through the country, made some
+inquiries, especially in the towns, and departed for Paris.
+It would have been as well if, like the French farther
+to the east, they had deliminated between the two people
+a neutral zone. Sooner or later the troubles were bound
+to recommence.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">MAGNANIMITY IN THE BANAT</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, of all the lands which the Yugoslavs were
+inheriting from Austro-Hungary, that which was passing
+through the period of transition with the least disturbance
+was the Banat. Those Magyars who stayed were saying
+wistfully that it had been Hungarian for a thousand
+years, but considering what they had done they could not
+have brought forward a worse reason for their reinstatement.
+Here and there at places near the frontier, such
+as Subotica, they waylaid and murdered lonely Serbian
+soldiers; after which, with the complicity of Magyar
+officials whom the Serbs had not removed, they managed to
+escape to Hungary. But as a rule they thought it wiser
+to stay peacefully in the Banat than seek their fortunes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+in a land so insecure as Hungary was then. While Count
+Michael Kar&oacute;lyi's Government was doing its utmost to
+cultivate good relations with France, England and America&mdash;printing
+in the newspapers cordial articles in French
+and English, surrounding the Entente officers even in
+their despite with the old, barbaric hypnotizing Magyar
+hospitality, assuming in a long wireless message to
+President Wilson that the Hungarians were among those
+happy people who at last had been liberated from the
+yoke of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire&mdash;("I
+beg you, Mr. President, to use your influence that no acts
+of inhumanity or abuses of authority may threaten our
+new-born democracy and freedom from any quarter.
+They would cruelly wound the soul of our people and
+hinder the maturing of that pure pacifism and that
+mutual understanding between the peoples without which
+there will never be peace and rest on earth.... We will
+not discredit or delay with acts of violence the new-born
+freedom of the peoples of Hungary or the triumph of your
+ideas....")&mdash;at a place called Nagylak the free Hungarian
+people requested the authorities to give them an official
+document permitting them to plunder for twenty-four
+hours; at a place called Szentes there was a car which
+had been stolen from a man at Arad, sixty miles away;
+hearing where it was he telegraphed to the authorities
+and nothing happened; so he hired another car and went
+himself to Szentes where the Magyar Commissary confiscated
+this one also. It was better to remain in the
+Banat if one had anything to lose. The treatment which
+the Magyars received was such that Mr. Rapp, Commissary
+of the Buda-Pest Government, published a proclamation
+on the generous conduct of the Serbian troops
+occupying southern Hungary: "Our nationals," he
+declared, "though vanquished and in a minority, are
+safe. The Serbian officers in command treat them in a
+most humane and chivalrous fashion."<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> At Pan&#269;evo,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>for example, the Magyar officials were placed, for their
+protection, on board a boat by the Serbian authorities
+and kept there, provided with food and cigars, for twelve
+hours, after which, as the danger was past, they were set
+at liberty. In the same town, forty years earlier, the
+language used in the law courts had been Serbian; no
+one, in fact, spoke Magyar, except the cab-drivers&mdash;if you
+spoke it people said you must have been in prison. Yet,
+although the Magyar judges had, to put it mildly, not
+been too considerate towards the Serbs, they were retained
+in office on the understanding that they would learn
+Serbian within a year; nor were they asked, as yet, to
+administer the law in the name of King Peter, but in the
+name of Justice. This magnanimity was not displayed
+because, as with the railway employees, the Serbs were
+short of people for those posts, since they had barristers
+well qualified to be employed, as they were, for example,
+at Sombor, in the position of temporary judges. Even
+the town advocate was not dismissed, although this
+healthy gentleman had superseded a Serb forty-two years
+of age, considerably older than himself, who had been
+compelled to join the army. Not alone were all these
+functionaries left in office, but the papers sent to them
+were in their own language, Magyar or German. And in
+return they generally were loyal to the Yugoslavs.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">TEME&#352;VAR IN TRANSITION</p>
+
+<p>An extraordinary state of things was to be seen at
+Teme&#353;var, where the Magyar mayor was one of the most
+worried men in Europe. Until February 1919 he was
+being asked to serve not two but several masters. Some
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>uncertainty existed as to whether the town was under
+French or Serbian military command, but that was not
+a very serious question. There was at Novi Sad a temporary
+Government for all the Voivodina, this was the
+"Narodna Uprava" (National Government), consisting
+of eleven commissaries, each over a department, who had
+been appointed by the Voivodina Assembly of 690 Serbs,
+12 Slovaks, 2 Magyars and 6 Germans&mdash;one deputy for
+every thousand of the population. The mayor of Teme&#353;var
+could have reconciled the wishes of the Narodna
+Uprava and the military authorities, but there was a
+Magyar Jewish Socialist, a certain Dr. Roth, who had
+elected himself to be head of the "People's Government,"
+and was subsequently appointed by telephone from
+Buda-Pest the representative of the Hungarian Government.
+Roth organized a civil guard, mostly of former
+Hungarian soldiers, who&mdash;although he paid them well (since
+Buda-Pest had given him 12 million crowns for propaganda
+purposes), yet had a way of borrowing a coat or
+cap from Serbian soldiers and, arrayed in these, holding
+up pedestrians after nightfall. Roth had therefore been
+granted the right to rule, but&mdash;save for the dubious
+guard&mdash;his power was only that which the Serbian or
+French authorities would give him. He issued many
+orders to the mayor, some of which were very questionable,
+as for instance when he sent provisions out of the
+Banat to Hungary. This produced so great a scarcity
+that the flour-mill employees thought it was the time to
+go on strike; they demanded 80 per cent. increase in
+wages, without undertaking to go back to work if they
+received it. "I am not a politician," said the harassed
+mayor, "I only want to save the town from starving."
+But the Narodna Uprava would send no food, since the
+town (that is to say Roth) would not acknowledge its
+authority. There were many rumours as to how Roth
+spent the sums from Buda-Pest, and a weekly Socialist
+sheet, which he himself had founded, but had now made
+over to a couple of his friends (likewise Magyar Jews),
+called F&uuml;rth and Isaac Gara, started to bring charges
+against its founder. Roth, whose previous resources
+were not large and were well known to F&uuml;rth and Gara,
+used now to frequent the fashionable caf&eacute; and indulge,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
+night after night, in potations of champagne, inviting
+to his table not F&uuml;rth nor Gara, but the French General.
+This officer, in the advance through Serbia, had captured
+a great many prisoners and a very large number of guns,
+arousing everybody's enthusiasm by his personal bravery,
+his dashing tactics and the skill with which he executed
+them. He was a most original person, who would sometimes
+about midnight in that caf&eacute; at Teme&#353;var leap on to
+one of the marble tables and there perform a <i>pas de seul</i>.
+Dr. Roth succeeded in worming himself into this merry
+warrior's good graces, and F&uuml;rth and Gara looked with
+jaundiced eyes on the carouses of these two. And in their
+newspaper, the <i>Teme&#353;var</i>, they said very biting things.
+Thereupon Roth complained about them to the Serbian
+authorities, asking that they should be sent to Belgrade.
+When the Serbs did nothing he made application to
+the French, and they&mdash;not aware of all the circumstances&mdash;sent
+the couple under guard to Belgrade, where they
+were interned. The mayor continued to receive the
+orders of the various parties, and then suddenly Roth
+organized a strike which lasted for two days&mdash;the railways,
+the electric light, the water-supply and the shops
+all joining in the movement. There was even a Magyar
+flag on the town hall, and cries were raised by a procession
+for the Magyar Republic. But this time he had gone
+too far. An order came from Belgrade, from General
+Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey, and Roth was taken in a car to Arad,
+where he was deposited on the other side of the line of
+demarcation.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">A SORT OF WAR IN CARINTHIA</p>
+
+<p>But the German-Austrians in Carinthia, seeing how the
+Slovenes were being treated by the Italians, could not
+resist attacking on their own account; and here the most
+tragic feature was that in the German ranks were many
+Germanized Slovenes. This had been the case at Maribor
+in Styria, where the population rose against the 70
+Slovene soldiers during the visit of an American mission.
+Many of those who were afterwards questioned were
+obliged to admit that they were of Slovene or of partly
+Slovene origin, but Austria had taken care of their national<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+conscience. Had they been freely left to choose between
+the two nationalities, and had they, out of admiration for
+the German, selected that one&mdash;you would not endeavour
+now to make them Slovenes; but of course these people
+were never given the choice, and therefore every effort
+should be used to make to dance that portion of their
+blood which is Slovene, and sometimes all your efforts
+will be fruitless. That those who fought in Carinthia
+against the Slovene troops were of this origin can be seen
+by the names of the officers of the so-called "Volkswehralarmkompagnien"
+(<i>i.e.</i> the People's Emergency Defence
+Companies). A document, marked W. No. 101, and
+signed by a Captain Sandner, fell into Slovene hands on
+February 21. It gives very full arrangements for these
+companies in Wolfsberg and the neighbourhood. At
+St. Paul, for instance, men are to gather from three other
+regions, to wit 40 from St. Paul itself, 120 from Granitzthal,
+60 from Lagerbuch and 30 from Eitweg; the officers
+of this St. Paul contingent are called Kronegger, Andrec,
+Kl&ouml;tsch and Gritsch&mdash;the last three are of Slovene origin.
+These Defence Companies consisted largely of ex-soldiers,
+under the command, very often, of a schoolmaster or some
+such person; and if they had done nothing more than to
+defend their own soil, one would have less to say about
+them; but as a matter of fact they sent arms across to
+their adherents in the territory occupied by the Slovenes.
+Thus at Velikovec (V&ouml;lkermarkt) and Donji Dravograd
+(Unter-Drauburg) shots were fired from houses which
+had been armed in this way. Incursions were made
+into Yugoslav territory, where the people were urged
+to rise; and as these Defence Companies did not wear
+any uniform their members could, if captured, protest
+their innocence. The officers were given 20 crowns a
+day, the men six crowns, with 5.44 a day for their keep
+during the time of emergency, and four crowns daily in
+addition if they went outside the garrison town. As it
+would not be possible to get the commissariat at once into
+working order the men were asked to bring at least
+sufficient bread with them for a few days. Most of the
+men had their own guns; those who had not would be
+lent one at the village office on the understanding that
+it was brought back there when the emergency was over.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+These Defence Companies were joined in the spring by
+2000 of the proletariat of Vienna who, at the railway
+station before they started, were cheered by speeches on
+the subject of plunder; at Graz they were joined by some
+students who proposed to maintain order.... It was
+in April that the Germans began nearly every day to
+fire on the Yugoslav troops, regardless of the Americans,
+who said that any infringement of the Armistice would
+be severely punished. The Slovene bridgehead around
+Velikovec was, towards the end of April, bombarded for
+several days with heavy artillery, and the local commander,
+on his own initiative, crossed the Armistice line in order to
+seize this artillery; he did, in fact, carry off some twenty
+pieces, with which he returned to his old positions. This
+caused the Germans to send through Zurich most indignant
+telegrams to the Entente Press, denouncing the
+Yugoslavs for having flagrantly crossed the Armistice line
+by 10 kilometres (cf. <i>Le Journal</i>, for example, of May 5).
+In the same report they were held up as villains for having
+crossed the river Drave at several points and cut the
+railway line; as a matter of fact their infantry was at
+least 11 kilometres to the south of the Drave, and the
+artillery, of course, still farther off. This railway line,
+which was the means of communication between Austrians
+and Italians, was the subject of very fierce talk on the
+part of the latter. All this time, be it remembered, the
+Slovenes had feeble forces; and their own officers do
+not pretend that they approach the Serbs as combatants.
+After centuries of servitude&mdash;a more insidious servitude
+than if their masters had been Moslem&mdash;they have now
+awakened to devote themselves, and with great success,
+to agriculture and industry. Nevertheless the old fighting
+spirit of the Slav has not been quite extinguished in
+them. Their opponents on May 2 made a big attack upon
+Celovec (Klagenfurt) and Beljak (Villach), where they
+had at their disposal the munitions of the entire 10th
+Austrian army. Several battalions had come down from
+Vienna, as well as 340 unemployed Austrian ex-officers,
+who were clothed as infantry privates. These officers
+were serving for the love of their country&mdash;up to May 1
+at all events they were in receipt of no pay. The Slovene
+ranks were somewhat depleted by Bol&#353;evik tracts, telling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+them to go home, as there would be no more war; and
+yet at Gutenstein sixty men with three machine guns,
+under Lieut. Maglaj, a Slovene from Carinthia, kept
+1500 men at bay from 9 a.m. till 3.30, after which they
+slowly withdrew until the fighting ceased at six; a
+corporal and two men of a machine-gun detachment were
+cut off and concealed themselves in the shrubs of a defile.
+Suddenly they heard a German company come down the
+road, singing as they marched. The three men opened
+fire&mdash;the Germans in perplexity stood still and then
+retired in disorder. The whole German-Austrian movement
+was checked by General Maister. And when the
+Serbian veterans, men of all ages, with uniforms of every
+shade, marched through the streets of Maribor, it was felt
+that there need be no more anxiety as to that particular
+frontier of Yugoslavia.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">YUGOSLAVIA BEGINS TO PUT HER HOUSE IN ORDER</p>
+
+<p>It was not until now that Great Britain (on May 9)
+and France (on June 5) formally recognized the new
+Serbo-Croat-Slovene State.<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> As the <i>Times</i> said, two
+years afterwards,<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> "it was not the Allies who created
+Czecho-Slovakia or brought about the establishment of
+Yugo-Slavia. These events were the inevitable result
+of the previous history which the Allies could not, even
+if they had desired to do so, prevent." The Americans
+had not been so extremely considerate to Italy, for they
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>had recognized the Yugoslav State on February 7, a few
+days after Norway and Switzerland.... And how
+necessary it was for the Yugoslavs to have some leisure
+for their home affairs, which presented so many complications.
+Here one system of laws and there another&mdash;with
+the best will in the world and waiving to the
+uttermost one's own idiosyncrasies, the Serbs and Croats
+and Slovenes were faced, at the beginning of their union,
+by most arduous problems. The Agrarian question was
+regarded generally as one of the most urgent. In Serbia
+itself, with practically the whole country in the hands of
+small peasant proprietors, this question did not arise;
+but in the provinces which had been lately under Austria-Hungary
+no time was to be lost, and yet a good deal of
+time would be needed to cope with a problem so full of
+complications. One difficulty was that each political
+party was inclined to solve this matter in accordance
+with its own interests. Among the three Slovene parties,
+for example, the Socialists would naturally work for their
+own principles, the Christian-Socialist party, whose
+supporters were chiefly the small farmers, would prefer
+to legislate for them, while the Liberal party, having in
+its ranks the larger landowners, would wish that all,
+except the very largest, should if possible be left intact;
+the very large landowners, moreover, will with the spread
+of democratic ideas lose their influence over the voters.
+There are several points on which all parties are agreed:
+thus, it is most undesirable that a man's holdings should,
+as now, be separated from each other, often by considerable
+distances, so that half his time may be spent in
+going to and from his fields and a good deal of the other
+half in the disputes which naturally spring from such a
+scattered ownership.... In Bosnia, where the Agrarian
+troubles had produced such frequent outbreaks and
+savage repression, the Austrians were given the mandate
+in 1878 in the hope that they would regulate this matter.
+They did not do very much; all that they really did
+was to modernize a little. They wrote down in a book
+who was the landlord and who were the kmets, and a
+copy of these details was available for each one of the
+kmets. He had the right to remain where he was&mdash;unless
+his conduct was exceptionally bad&mdash;and to retain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+two-thirds of the produce of the land. This kmet-right
+was not hereditary in the female line; but the kmet
+could buy his portion&mdash;this was an old right, which
+Austria regulated&mdash;and become a free man, a beg. He
+would sometimes be a free man in one place and a kmet
+in another. In Bosnia there are, of course, some extremely
+large landowners; but most of the begs are
+poor folk, who live on the third part of a few farms.
+It would be better if these men were not compensated
+with cash, but rather that they should be established on
+farms which they would work themselves, the distinction
+between the small begs and the kmets thus disappearing.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE PROBLEM OF AGRARIAN REFORM</p>
+
+<p>A special Ministry was created to supervise, throughout
+Yugoslavia, the question of Agrarian Reform; but
+the Cabinet was frequently engaged in discussing this
+important topic and, many months afterwards, when
+the ownership of a good deal of the land had been changed,
+it was acknowledged that the problem had been attacked
+more often than it had been solved. Mr. Pa&#353;i&#263;, who
+does not believe in hasty legislation, pointed out that
+the Austrians had in forty years done really very little
+in Bosnia. He was told, however, that in Croatia, for
+example, the revolutionary spirit at the end of the War
+was so intense that if the Government were to postpone
+the necessary reforms then the people would simply
+seize whatever land they wished to have. It is true
+that violence was rampant in those parts&mdash;the peasants
+believed that with Austria's collapse there would arrive
+the Earthly Paradise, and in order to bring this about
+they ravaged a good many fine estates and set fire to
+various castles. They were going to stand no nonsense.
+At a place called Lubi&#353;ica in Croatia&mdash;where the 350
+families lived in 260 houses&mdash;the landowner, out of the
+goodness of his heart, bestowed twenty "joch" of meadowland
+on the village in 1864. A law was passed which
+obliged him to devote a certain amount of land to the
+support of the church and the school&mdash;he gave the
+identical twenty joch. And at the end of the War the
+peasants maintained that at last this land was going to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+be restored to them; they drove their cattle on to it,
+but the priest with the help of <i>gendarmerie</i> drove them
+off again. Once more the cattle came back and then the
+priest seized a gun; he fired at his parishioners and
+wounded in the head a sixteen-year-old boy, as well as
+three other persons. This so enraged the village that
+they went in a body and slew the priest.... And the
+authorities, although at that period they were faced with
+so many problems, attempted to settle right away this
+very complicated question. The Dobrovoljci&mdash;volunteers
+with the Yugoslav forces who had come home from the
+United States, Canada and Australia or who had managed
+to escape from the Austro-Hungarian army&mdash;had been
+promised so many acres, each of them, after the War.
+And these Dobrovoljci and the agitated peasants found
+that the land was, so to speak, thrust upon them. A
+lawyer-politician would take a map, would assign a
+certain area to A, another to B, and imagine he had done
+a good morning's work; but unhappily the lawyer often
+forgot that a farm, to be of any use to its tenant, must
+have a road leading to it, must have a well, a cart, a horse,
+some oxen and so forth&mdash;to say nothing of a dwelling-place.
+Thus it would happen that the new tenant would
+go to look at his holding and in disgust would go away,
+or&mdash;contrary to law&mdash;would sublet it or sell it back to
+the original owner. If, on the other hand, he remained
+the State would, from an economical point of view, only
+benefit in those regions where the land had hitherto
+been more or less uncultivated; where it had been
+cultivated by the moderately large or the very large
+landowner it always returned a harvest more considerable
+than that which the new tenant, insufficiently
+equipped and experienced, was able to achieve. Not
+only would there be this diminished production&mdash;frequently
+in the proportion of six to ten&mdash;but a large
+number of employees were thrown out of employment:
+sometimes a clever Czech overseer, whose family of six
+children had almost become Croat, and sometimes a
+native farmer whose house was wanted for the Dobrovoljci.
+The Czech would return to his own country and
+the dispossessed farmer would become a Communist.
+Yet these material and human losses to the State might<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+have been endured if there had been a compensating
+political advantage, that is to say if the new tenants
+had been satisfied. But in far too many instances they
+were not. And one cannot help thinking that, in the
+vast majority of cases, they themselves would have
+preferred to wait until the Peasants' Co-operative Associations&mdash;such
+as flourish in Denmark&mdash;had been established.
+It need scarcely be said that, from the point of view of
+the peasant and of the State, these associations are an
+absolute necessity. The most deplorable example of the
+measures that were taken in such haste is seen, of course,
+in a model-property, such as that of Count &#268;ekoni&#263; in
+the north of the Banat, where the new tenants, seeking
+as elsewhere to satisfy only their own wants and paying
+no heed to any possible exports, allow a highly developed
+property to go in a retrograde direction. If the Dobrovoljci
+had been skilled agriculturists there would have
+been no harm in settling them on this excellent estate;
+and with a Co-operative Association the 3000 joch of
+sugar that were grown there during the War would not
+now be reduced to 88 joch. But as it is, what with the
+unfortunate inexperience of most of the new tenants
+and their lack of means, and what with the stupidity of
+the local authorities who left to the previous owner one
+field here and one field there in the most absurd fashion,
+it would have been better both for Count &#268;ekoni&#263; and
+for the State if he had simply presented to the Dobrovoljci
+half his land. A great many mistakes have been made
+in this question of Agrarian Reform, one of the most
+cardinal being&mdash;as Radi&#263;, the spokesman of the Croat
+peasants, has pointed out&mdash;to bestow the land not on
+people because they can farm it, but because they were
+heroes in the War.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> It is a matter for congratulation
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>that the measures now in force are not definite&mdash;the final
+dispositions will be taken in two or three years.<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> And
+perhaps then some part of the counsel of Radi&#263; may be
+adopted&mdash;Radi&#263;, whose critics are never weary of denouncing
+him for being a demagogue, a firebrand and
+various other things, but who by that time may very
+likely be a Cabinet Minister. He advises that there
+should be a compromise, that the ownership of land in
+Yugoslavia should not be strictly individualist nor
+strictly communist, but that while preserving the spirit
+of the <i>zadruga</i> (ownership by the community) there
+should also be the mobility of individual ownership.</p>
+
+<p>But in the field of Agrarian Reform there has been
+one excellent plan, the transference of men from the
+unfertile districts of Montenegro and Lika, also of landless
+men from the Banat and Ba&#269;ka, as also Serbs from Hungary
+and Slovenes from Istria, to those parts of Kossovo and
+Macedonia which were lying ownerless. The Albanians
+in Kossovo are mostly shepherds, and the land, which by
+Turkish law had belonged to "God and the Sultan,"
+was now at the disposal of the Yugoslav authorities.
+Down to the spring of 1922 they had placed some 35,000
+persons in these regions, the Montenegrins being generally
+allocated to an Albanian neighbourhood, for they are
+accustomed to the idiosyncrasies of the Shqyptart. At
+first the Albanians viewed the new settlers with disfavour,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>but now so great a sympathy has developed between
+them that on various occasions the Montenegrins have
+remonstrated with the gendarmes for the excessive order
+they enforce and which, the Montenegrins say, you
+really cannot ask of an Albanian. Against the Montenegrins
+the Albanians do not care to use their rifles, since
+the custom of blood-vengeance is in the Montenegrin
+blood. In fact, these Albanians are very fair neighbours,
+the most unruly of them living in the mountains of
+the frontier. And the Montenegrins have been showing
+that when they are not compelled to live with weapons
+in their hand they can be quite industrious. There has,
+till now, been more colonization of Kossovo than of
+Macedonia; but there are wide tracts of country around
+Skoplje which will be settled, once they have been freed
+from malaria. The political consequences that this will
+have on Macedonia, by the stabilization of economic
+conditions, the supersession of the wooden plough by
+the steam plough&mdash;in fact, the advent of a new European
+spirit need scarcely be enlarged upon. In Serbian
+Macedonia, or South Serbia as it is now officially called,
+more than seven million acres of good soil are as yet
+not being used.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">FRENZY AT RIEKA</p>
+
+<p>As the months rolled on at Rieka the Italianists
+became more frantic. Their telegrams to Rome, in which
+they begged for instant annexation, were in vain, and after
+all, what was the use of adopting the system of Lieut.-Colonel
+Stadler, their energetic podest&agrave; at Abbazia, who
+would go into the hills, accost the peasants and instruct
+them that they must not say: "It will be settled by the
+Paris Conference," but rather&mdash;"It has been settled
+by the Paris Conference." All the world was learning
+what was the position of affairs at Rieka; one of the most
+important of these plaguy Allied officers had said that
+when he first came to the town he thought it was Italian,
+but he had soon perceived that it was all a comedy,
+and the Italianists were dreadfully afraid that memoranda
+and statistics and what not had been dispatched to Paris
+and that there was the faintest, awful possibility that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
+one could say: "It has been settled by the Paris Conference."
+Everyone, alas! was studying the case&mdash;one
+heard that Cardinal Bourne, in the course of being f&ecirc;ted
+at Zagreb, was reported to have shown himself quite
+intimate with Croatian history and to have discussed
+especially the story of Rieka. But by far the shrewdest
+blow to the Italianists was Wilson's Declaration. What
+had his emissaries, who had listened with such care to
+everybody, told him? One must have a grand procession
+through the town to show the whole world what
+the people wanted! As for Wilson, it was good to hear
+the lusty shouts of the "Giovani Fiumani": "Down
+with Wilson! down with redskins!" Some of the
+demonstrators, after shouting that Wilson was a donkey,
+a horse, a ruffian, would acclaim the new suggestion,
+that their enemy was not Wilson at all but Rudolf of
+Austria, who was still alive. Another very good idea
+would be to have great posters made with Wilson's
+head crowned by a German helmet, and now, of course,
+the Hotel Wilson must become the Hotel Orlando. Let
+them put a large black cross on all the Croat houses of
+Rieka&mdash;well, on second thoughts, next morning, that
+was not a very brilliant idea, because the crosses were
+too numerous; so let the soldiers rub them out again.
+And where the Croat names on banks and shops and
+elsewhere had been effaced, demolished&mdash;one could hide
+them by long strips of paper which they were so busy
+printing: "Either Italy or death!" "Viva Orlando!"
+"Viva Sonnino!"&mdash;those papers were the best reply
+to people who were asking if the entire Italian Cabinet
+was in harmony with Sonnino. Not merely in harmony&mdash;the
+Cabinet <i>was</i> Sonnino and more particularly Orlando
+was Sonnino. An Italian major came out on to a balcony
+one evening, in uniform, and opened his Italian heart
+to the crowd. What would the Allies say to that?
+The <i>Dante Alighieri</i>, the great dreadnought, man&oelig;uvring
+with her searchlights, let them rest awhile upon the
+<i>Schley</i>, an American destroyer. What would the Yankees
+do? "Avanti Savoia!" Perhaps in the old days they
+would have sent a shot or two into the searchlights,
+just for luck, but now they did nothing. And what a
+scene at the Opera when <i>Andr&eacute; Chenier</i> was performed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+and one of the singers came to the word "Traitor!"
+and some one shouted "Wilson!" and the whole house
+shouted "Wilson!" and the singer, forced to repeat
+the blessed word, added amid indescribable enthusiasm
+the name of the President, that ignominious President
+concerning whom it was revealed by one of their newspapers
+that he must obviously have pocketed Yugoslav
+money, perhaps a million, and who most probably had
+a Yugoslav mistress&mdash;when that opera-singer had emended
+the phrase, did that very exalted Italian officer leave
+his box? Why, no&mdash;he stayed until the end of the
+performance.... Did any Italian in Rieka read to the
+end a small and lucid American book, <i>Italy and the
+Yugoslavs, A Question of International Law</i>, by C.&nbsp;A.&nbsp;H.
+Bartlett of the New York and United States Federal
+Bar? "It is an admitted fact," says Mr. Bartlett,
+"that Italy at the outbreak of hostilities had no rights
+to, or in, the territory to which she now makes claim.
+Her title, therefore, has arisen since the commencement
+of the War, and must be founded on either effective
+possession legally acquired or on documentary evidence
+or some other right recognized by international law."
+And quoting Professor Westlake (<i>International Law</i>,
+Part I. p. 91) as to the four grounds on which a State
+may vindicate its sovereignty over new domain, he discusses
+the position in the Adriatic, and concludes that
+Italy can claim no title by occupancy, cession, succession
+or self-determination. We refer elsewhere to Mr. Bartlett's
+commentary on the London Treaty, which is the instrument
+invoked by the Italians for their claims to Dalmatia.
+With regard to Rieka, which, as everybody knows, was
+not included even in the London Treaty, Mr. Bartlett
+says that while "admitting, for the purpose of argument,
+that the seizure has since resulted in an effective possession,
+yet, as that is not sufficient in itself to give title,
+it has no legal or effective force, but can be compared
+with nomads squatting on the roadside and then claiming
+a right to the soil. Italy was ashamed to assume the
+responsibility for the original appropriation of Rieka,
+which was made in violation of every legal right of those
+to whom it belongs, and she might well be, for a more
+audacious, unjustifiable proceeding in violation of every<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+principle of international law it is difficult to imagine." ...
+As for the Italian National Council, listen to the stirring
+sentences of Mr. Grossich, its old President, after they
+had unanimously voted on May 17, and with passionate
+conviction, an order of the day directed to Orlando.
+In that order it was stated that they looked upon the
+plebiscite of October 30, 1918, as an indestructible,
+historical and legal fact. Grossich exposed the situation
+and was then for some instants mute. His voice was
+trembling when he spoke: "The sacrifice which circumstances
+may demand is tremendous, but if it is required
+by the supreme interests of Italy we will know how to
+support it. More than a citizen of Fiume, I feel myself
+an Italian" ("Primo che fiumano mi sento italiano").
+At this point the old patriot broke into tears. "Fiume
+will defend herself with arms against all those who desire
+to violate her will, her national conscience. Seeing that
+her tenacious, indestructible Italianity is a grave impediment
+for Italy in the attaining of other objects, let Fiume
+be left to look after herself, sure as she is of her sons,
+prepared as she is, to-day more than ever, to sacrifice
+herself. She will defend herself against all and from
+wherever they come." Those who listened thought
+that this must mean that either the <i>Pester Lloyd</i> of
+April 29 was lying when it printed an official message
+stating that General Segr&eacute;, the Italian representative
+at Vienna, had in the name of his Government requested
+the Hungarian Soviet Republic to undertake
+the care of Italian subjects in Rieka, or else that the
+Magyars had told him that the 22,000 or 23,000
+Italian soldiers in Rieka ought to be sufficient, as this
+was practically one soldier for every person who had
+been described as an Italian. But the I.N.C. had now
+resolved to take no risks; they entered into negotiations
+with Sem Benelli, a well-known poet of the school which
+some critics call enlivening and other critics call inflammatory.
+Anyhow, on the afternoon of June 13,
+Mr. Benelli was made a citizen of Rieka, a member of
+the central committee and was entrusted with the portfolio
+of Minister of War, that is to say Commissary for
+Defence. He thanked the I.N.C. in a long speech, and
+declared that his appointment was the wedding of Rieka<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
+and Italy. Then Dr. Vio proposed a law, respecting
+the defence to the uttermost of Italian rights&mdash;that an
+army should be created and that the expenses should be
+met by the issue of bonds for a hundred million lire.
+The citizen Benelli was asked to undertake the organization
+and the command of the army.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ADMIRAL MILLO EXPLAINS THE SITUATION</p>
+
+<p>Farther down the coast and on the islands the Italians
+seemed, with few exceptions, to have relinquished every
+effort to make themselves popular with the Slavs. Of
+course one naturally hears more of the cases of tension
+than of those where friendliness prevails; but in the
+towns or villages where the Slav <i>intelligentsia</i> appreciated
+that an officer was doing his best, they were obliged invariably
+to add that he was doing it in spite of his men,
+and that his control of these men was more or less defective.
+Numbers of the soldiers, marines and carabinieri may have
+been animated, when they landed in Dalmatia, with
+excellent intentions, but their months amid an alien population
+had produced in them too often a deplorable effect.
+It must be taken into account that many of them had
+an almost insurmountable desire to be demobilized. At
+Gradi&#353;ca, where many Slovenes were interned, with
+fences round them but with no roof other than the sky,
+their guards with other soldiers had risen in revolt. This
+outbreak was suppressed, certain soldiers&mdash;some say sixty,
+but the number is doubtful&mdash;being shot; and all the
+others took an oath that on the first occasion of a deserter
+being shot at, they would, down to the last man, leave
+the barracks. This movement had been growing since
+the withdrawal of Bissolati from the Cabinet. As for the
+young officers, they had been exhorted, in a communication
+from Admiral Millo, the Governor, that they must realize
+the position they were in. The Admiral's memorial,
+which was marked with wisdom but also with a too-sweeping
+air of superiority, was labelled "Secret Document:
+No. 558 of Register P. Section of Propaganda.
+Sebenico, March 21, 1919." A copy was found by the
+Yugoslavs under an officer's mattress, was transcribed and
+replaced. Since it made admissions with regard to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+Croats the contents were telegraphed to Paris. It is a
+lengthy and to us at times a rather rhetorical expos&eacute;,
+of which it will suffice to make some extracts. "The
+Officer," says Admiral Millo, "should place himself in a
+calm and dignified fashion outside and above the disputes
+which divide the sentiments of the local population. And
+in accounting, psychologically and historically, for the
+detestations and the aspirations of either party, he
+must regard the situation with the serene mind of a judge....
+The position of officers is extremely delicate, more
+particularly in the small centres. It is known that outside
+the towns the population in its great majority and often
+its totality consists of Yugo-Slavs or Slavs of the South,
+that is to say, Croats or Serbo-Croats. It is a people
+of another race, of that formidable Slav race which for
+centuries has been pressing against the West, athirst for
+liberty and eager for the sea; a people with a psychology,
+a mentality, a civilization, habits, traditions, a national
+consciousness and a quite special individuality. This
+population is fundamentally good, good as simple and
+primitive people are. But the simple and primitive
+peoples are also extremely sensitive and suspicious and
+violent in their impulses.... May Heaven preserve the
+officers from not taking these things into account and
+from letting themselves be guided solely by their Italian
+feelings.... Firm nerves, sangfroid and an evenly-balanced
+mind are required in order to prevent the hostility
+of the population from causing, as a reaction, resentment
+and a spirit of revolt, of vengeance and of oppression on
+our part. The officer must ... become an element of
+moderation and pacification, with the object of assuaging
+and obviating the bitter feelings which have been created
+and fed by a past that is and must be wiped out for ever;
+and of dissipating that hostility which, determined by
+a political situation and events, has been and is being
+incited and strengthened by blind passions and an
+artificially created campaign of interested parties (<i>da
+artificiose interessate campagna</i>).... It must be remembered
+that this is the first contact (<i>il primo contatto</i>)
+which the population, as yet primitive and uncultured in
+its mass, has had with Italy, where it instinctively sees the
+enemy and the new oppressor. We must do our best to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
+make them see in Italy their friend and liberator.... It
+is evident and it leaps to the eyes of all how delicate and
+important is the moment of this first contact. Nothing
+more than a superficial knowledge of the circumstances is
+needed for the officer to understand that in all his official
+and personal acts he must behave in such a manner that
+the population, which is primitive and simple and therefore
+all the more susceptible to suggestions, should
+regain the impression that Italy is a great country, the
+country of liberty and right, that its people is educated
+and civilized, that its officers and soldiers are here to fulfil
+a work of civilization and education, of love, in a country
+which must be Italian on account of historic rights and
+for the exigencies of Italy's defence: in which the Slavs,
+who have been introduced by the course of events and as
+an effect of the expansive potentiality of their race and the
+artifices of those who dominated the country, will find in
+the independence and development of their nationality
+a great fatherland which is civilized, powerful, humane
+and free.... In estimating the enmity of the Croats
+the fact must be taken into account that the Croatian
+world, I mean to say the Croat people, with its action in
+the interior of Austria while the Italian army was acting
+outside, resolutely and victoriously, has co-operated in
+precipitating the downfall of Austria and in freeing itself
+from a detested r&eacute;gime; particularly in the last year of
+the War this sentiment of nationality became accentuated
+with the fervent aspiration for liberty.... These are the
+circumstances which have determined a special psychology
+composed of joy and ecstasy&mdash;both elements which, in minds
+that are laden with all the influences of the East, produce
+a facile and dangerous excitement. On the other hand
+there survives in the Italian population the hatred against
+the Croatian supremacy, a hatred which is comprehensible
+but which in time must give place to other sentiments,
+rendering possible a fair coexistence of the two populations,
+whose aim should be common&mdash;the prosperity and
+development of Dalmatia, in the prosperity and for the
+prosperity, in the greatness and for the greatness of Italy.
+From this picture it must be instantly clear to every officer
+that his duty here is ... a truly lofty mission of civilization....
+Especially the officer who is in charge of administrative<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+work must awaken impressions that are naturally
+caused by the sense of justice for all; his severity
+must be good and his goodness must be severe, and from
+every act there must transpire the dignity which comes
+from the might and right of Italy, the kindness and generosity
+which come from the virtue of the race.... There
+is already an impression on the part of the Croats that the
+Italians are good, that Italy is strong. There must also
+be born and reinforced the other conviction that we are
+not oppressors but liberators.... The best propaganda,
+the most efficacious, because spontaneous and unexpected,
+is done by the officer and his men. The Italian officer ...
+with the harmony of manners which distinguishes him,
+obtains very easily the sympathies of this population, a
+sympathy, however, which for an optimist may become
+dangerous. Young officers must not forget that the propagators
+of the great Yugoslavia still exercise with their
+megalomania a potent influence over the primitive population
+and that a gesture of theirs, a word, an attitude,
+may even yet indirectly favour the Croat cause and make
+difficulties for us in exhibiting our mission of civilization."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">HIS MISGUIDED SUBORDINATES AT &#352;IBENIK</p>
+
+<p>It is strange that this order should have been so
+scurvily treated in the town of &#352;ibenik, where it was
+issued and where the Admiral resided until the beginning
+of June, after which he transferred the seat of government
+to Zadar. At &#352;ibenik, by the way, the population comprises
+13,000 Yugoslavs and 400 Italianists. On February
+20, 1919, there arrived from Zadar, in consequence
+of an invitation from Admiral Millo, the Italian professor
+Domiaku&#353;i&#263; who, according to the sixth clause of the
+Armistice, was justified in assuming the functions of school-controller,
+but was not authorized to become the inspector
+or in any way to interfere in didactic matters. Two inspectors
+existed in Dalmatia, one for the elementary and
+one for the secondary school, but the chief school authority
+of the province and the two inspectors under him were
+not informed of Professor Domiaku&#353;i&#263;'s nomination. If
+the Governor intended him to abide by the stipulations
+of the Armistice, he must have been astonished at the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+schools being shut on the day after his arrival. And
+they remained shut, both the modern school and the
+middle-class girls' school for months, because the Professor's
+quite illegal attempt to usurp the inspectorship
+was resented. The secondary school was closed and the
+teachers who had come to &#352;ibenik with their families,
+but whose permanent domicile was elsewhere, received an
+order, delivered by carabinieri, that they would have to
+leave the town in four days. A few Italians were brought
+from Split and the school was reopened, but the attendance,
+which had been about 200, was now 24, and of
+these only two were the sons of Yugoslavs&mdash;but Yugoslavs
+who had taken office under the Italians, one as President
+of the Court of Justice and the other as prison inspector;
+these gentlemen took their boys by the hand and led
+them to school. Perhaps the Admiral was unaware of
+these transactions; but various Yugoslav officials, whose
+salaries had been withheld because they would not sign
+a paper asking to be made Italian officials, continued,
+notwithstanding, at their posts for two months; after
+which the Government perceived that by the clauses of the
+Armistice they were compelled to pay them. Each of
+them received exactly what was due, while some Italian
+teachers who had signed the paper were given a war
+bonus, extending over five months, of 80 per cent.
+Whether the Admiral knew of this or not, it does not
+harmonize with his exalted sentiments. And the town-commandant
+spoke very darkly<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> on various occasions to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>the leading citizens of what would come to pass if the
+Italians by any chance were told to leave the place. His
+brave fellows, the arditi, so he said, had plenty of machine
+guns and of ammunition. But this fair-haired German-looking
+officer was a rampageous sort of person who discharged,
+according to his lights, the Admiral's "truly
+lofty mission of civilization." It was not he, but another
+of the Admiral's subordinates at &#352;ibenik, who, when <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'aproached'">approached</ins>
+by a certain Mr. Iva&#353;a Zori&#263; with the request
+that something might be done to release his son, a prisoner
+of war in Italy, replied: "Your son shall be released in
+eight days, provided that you declare, in writing, that you
+are content with the Italian occupation." On Mr. Zori&#263;
+saying that he was unable to do this, "Very well," said
+the officer, "then your son will be one of the last to be set
+free."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE ITALIANS WANT TO TAKE NO RISKS</p>
+
+<p>Altogether one might say that the schoolmasters were
+being treated in a manner that was at variance with the
+Admiral's document. To give a few examples: Ivan
+Grbi&#263;, the schoolmaster at Sutomi&#353;cica, was arbitrarily
+imprisoned and was afterwards removed to another school
+at Privlaka. The Government school at the former
+place was closed, an Italian private institution being
+opened in the same building, with a teacher who was
+devoid of professional qualifications. The pupils of the
+school which had been dissolved were compelled by
+soldiers to attend the new Italian school. The elementary
+schools at Zemunik were likewise closed and the schoolmasters,
+after a period of imprisonment, taken to another
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>village. If in the rather dreary little Zemunik, where
+there is not one Italian, the schoolmaster was very
+dangerous to the might of Italy, let us compare with this
+the conduct of the Slovene authorities who <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'permittep'">permitted</ins>
+more than one priest of the old r&eacute;gime to remain in office&mdash;one
+of them at a village four or five miles from Ljubljana&mdash;though
+they knew that these clergy were wont from the
+pulpit to utter disloyal sentiments. Maybe the Slovene
+Government was unwise, but they had scruples in removing
+a priest; and moreover, they had not given up the hope
+that these gentlemen would by and by change their
+opinions. On the island of Pag the schoolmaster Buratovi&#263;
+and his wife, who was also a teacher, had to fly in order
+to escape imprisonment. The schoolmaster Grimani of
+the same place was obliged, with his wife, to follow the
+example of Buratovi&#263;, so that the school was necessarily
+closed; and an Italian school was started in this island
+with its 0&middot;31 per cent. of Italians. The same edifying
+scenes must have taken place as in so many Magyar
+schools where the pupils&mdash;Serbs, Slovaks, Roumanians
+and so forth&mdash;did not understand what the teacher
+was saying. The Government of the occupied part
+of Dalmatia appointed to the elementary schools at
+Rogoznica and Primo&#353;ten two young Italian law-students
+from Zadar, who had no pedagogic qualifications; and
+whereas the legal annual salary was 1080 crowns, these
+lucky young men were in receipt of 625 crowns a month,
+which covered more than handsomely any depreciation
+in the currency. But now to another subject:</p>
+
+<table summary="statistics" style="font-size: 90%">
+<tr><td class="rightalign">&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>Per cent. Yugoslavs.</td><td style="padding-left: 2em">Per cent. Italians.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">1.</td><td class="leftalign">Zadar</td><td class="rightalign">with 80&middot;25</td><td class="rightalign">with 18&middot;61</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">2.</td><td class="leftalign">Hvar (Lesina)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 92&middot;94</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 6&middot;75</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">3.</td><td class="leftalign">Kor&#269;ula (Curzola)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 94&middot;89</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 5&middot;08</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">4.</td><td class="leftalign">&#352;ibenik (Sebenico)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 95&middot;66</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 1&middot;31</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">5.</td><td class="leftalign">Starigrad (Cittavecchia)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 97&middot;98</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 1&middot;91</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">6.</td><td class="leftalign">Vis (Lissa)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 98&middot;98</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;92</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">7.</td><td class="leftalign">Skradin (Scardona)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;36</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;57</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">8.</td><td class="leftalign">Knin</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;48</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;31</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">9.</td><td class="leftalign">Drni&#353; (Dernish)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;49</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;41</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">10.</td><td class="leftalign">Benkovac</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;60</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;30</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">11.</td><td class="leftalign">Tijesno (Stretto)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;61</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;35</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">12.</td><td class="leftalign">Biograd (Zaravecchia)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;66</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;23</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">13.</td><td class="leftalign">Pag (Pago)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;67</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;31</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">14.</td><td class="leftalign">Obrovac (Obrovazzo)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;84</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;12</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">15.</td><td class="leftalign">Kistanje</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;88</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;12</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">16.</td><td class="leftalign">Blato (Blatta)</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;93</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span> 0&middot;05</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The London Treaty had conferred on Italy the foregoing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+Judiciary Districts, whose population, according to
+the last Austrian census, was as given on page 147.</p>
+
+<p>Italy was also to receive portions of the following
+Justiciary Districts:</p>
+
+<table summary="statistics" style="font-size: 90%">
+<tr><td class="rightalign">&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>Per cent. Yugoslavs.</td><td style="padding-left: 2em">Per cent. Italians.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">1.</td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 3em">Trogir (Tra&ugrave;)</td><td class="rightalign">with 99&middot;12</td><td class="rightalign">with 0&middot;32</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">2.</td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 3em">Sinj</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;29</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 0&middot;24</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">3.</td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 3em">Imotski</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;84</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 0&middot;11</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="rightalign">4.</td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 3em">Vrlika</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 99&middot;95</td><td class="rightalign"><span style="padding-right: 0.75em">"</span> 0&middot;04</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>In the early part of 1919 a plebiscite was organized
+by a delegation which the representatives of the occupied
+communes elected at Split on January 11. According
+to the census of 1900 the occupied territory contained
+35 communes, divided into 398 localities, with 297,181
+inhabitants. In 35 localities, with 14,659 inhabitants,
+the census was prevented by the Italians, who also confiscated
+the results of the plebiscite in the commune of
+Obrovac.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> The delegates were therefore successful in
+canvassing 95&middot;07 per cent. of all the inhabitants. In
+34 communes the majority for union with Yugoslavia
+was over 90 per cent., while in 24 it exceeded even 99 per
+cent. At Zadar (the town) out of 14,056 inhabitants
+6623 (= 47 per cent.) voted for Yugoslavia, while in
+the suburbs, with a larger population, the majority was
+89&middot;57 per cent. In the islands the majorities ranged from
+96 per cent. to 100 per cent. And if any doubts were
+entertained as to these figures, the delegates were authorized
+to propose another plebiscite under the control of a
+disinterested Allied Power.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">YET THEY ARE INCREDIBLY NONCHALANT</p>
+
+<p>Dalmatia, as is shown by the number of emigrants,
+is not a wealthy province; and one would have supposed
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>that if the Italians thought it necessary to occupy a
+country whose inhabitants were so unmistakably opposed
+to them, it would have been&mdash;to put it at the lowest&mdash;politic
+to hamper no one in the getting of his livelihood.
+Austria had established fourteen military fishing centres
+(besides others in Rieka, Istria, etc.), and these the
+Croats joined most willingly, as a means of avoiding
+service in a hated army. After the war, when their nets
+were worn out, Italy supplied her Chioggia fisherfolk with
+new ones. Owing to the conditions of the Triple Alliance,
+the Italians enjoyed the right to "high-sea" fishing, that
+is to say, the fishing up to three miles from the Dalmatian
+coast; but now the Italian boats occupied all the rich
+fishing grounds among the northern islands. These
+dispossessed natives were originally more preoccupied with
+fish than with Italians. Is it strange that they refused
+to see that Italy was, in the words of Admiral Millo, the
+friend and liberator?... A German firm, the Steinbeiss
+Company, had built in Bosnia a very narrow-gauge line
+for the exploitation of its forests; during the War this
+line was continued to Prijedor, and with great difficulty
+it had served for the transport of food-stuff and passengers
+from Croatia: on the Croatian lines up to Sissak normal
+gauge; from there to Prijedor narrow gauge; from there
+to Knin very narrow gauge, and from there to Split or
+&#352;ibenik narrow gauge. Thus with the loading and unloading
+between 30 per cent. and 50 per cent. of the goods
+were lost; but when Italy sat down at Rieka the inhabitants
+of Dalmatia looked to this line. At Prijedor
+hundreds of waggons of wheat and corn were waiting to
+be forwarded, and with Italy blocking the road at Knin
+they simply perished.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ONE OF THEIR VICTIMS</p>
+
+<p>The Italian administration of Dalmatia&mdash;economically,
+politically, scholastically, ecclesiastically and financially
+(as we will show)&mdash;was thoroughly mistaken. Wherever
+one goes one is overwhelmed with evidence; it is impossible
+to print more than a tithe of it. But the mention
+of Knin recalls the case of Dr. Bogi&#263;, who was deported
+to Sardinia for political reasons. On January 1 he was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
+arrested, together with a Franciscan monk, a schoolmaster
+and others, transported to &#352;ibenik and put into a cell
+devoid of bed, light or a window. Thence, with nothing
+to eat, although the weather was wintry, he was taken
+on to the <small>s.s.</small> <i>Almissa</i>, bound for Ancona. Near &#352;ibenik
+the boat collided with the isle of Zlarin; he and the other
+prisoners attempted to get out of their cabin, but carabinieri
+kept them there by flourishing revolvers in their
+faces. At Ancona, Spoleto, Perugia, Florence and Leghorn
+the doctor was always lodged in prisons, had his
+finger-prints taken, had to stand up to salute the warders,
+had to look on while his things were stolen&mdash;at Ancona,
+for instance, they despoiled him of eighty cigars. His
+wrists were always bound; he was attached not only to his
+fellow-travellers but to Italians who were under life-sentences.
+The carabinieri cut up their bread, put it on
+their knees and then, without unbinding the ropes, left
+them to eat it as best they could. The journey was very
+slow; thus from Perugia to Florence&mdash;being all the time
+attached to one another&mdash;it took sixteen hours. Dr.
+Conti, the prison doctor at Florence, said that Dr. Bogi&#263;
+was ill, but as he declined to give him a certificate the
+journey was resumed. From Florence to Leghorn he
+was bound so tightly that his wrists were very much
+swollen. From Leghorn in the <small>s.s.</small> <i>Derna</i> he was shipped
+to Sardinia, where he had experience of several prisons,
+including that of Terranuova-Pausania, where water
+flows down the walls and vermin are everywhere. He
+received 2.75 lire a day with which to buy his food, and
+although he is a doctor they refused to let him read any
+medical books. When I asked him of what he had been
+guilty, he began by recounting his war work. Over
+6000 Italian prisoners were at Knin, and he was there
+as military doctor for more than two years. These
+Italians were employed on the railway line and&mdash;as is
+clear from the letters they wrote to him after their release&mdash;letters
+some of which I read&mdash;they had very friendly
+recollections of the doctor. Once in the summer of
+1918 a group of Italians arrived who had been, in the
+doctor's words, "bestially maltreated at Zala-Egerseg
+by the Magyars." Dozens died on the way to Knin,
+others while they were being got out of the station, others<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
+on the way to the hospital. They were nothing but
+skeletons, dressed almost exclusively in paper clothes.
+General Wucherer happened to be at Knin and to him
+the doctor reported that the Italians had been treated in
+an absolutely criminal fashion. Wucherer, who was a
+decent fellow, ordered the doctor to dictate the whole
+affair and said that if nothing else could be done he would
+go direct to His Majesty. Then standing up he struck the
+table, in the presence of his staff, of Dr. Grgin of Split
+and of the railway commandant Captain Bergmann, and
+"Wir sind doch die gr&ouml;ssten Schuften!" he exclaimed
+("After all, it is we who are the biggest scoundrels!")....
+When the Yugoslavs overthrew the Austrian Government
+at Knin, the doctor, a kindly-looking, little, bald
+man, made a speech to the prisoners from the balcony
+of the town hall. He armed two of the Italians and ten
+French prisoners, whom he told off to guard the magazine.
+The two Italians (Cirillo Tomba and Mario Favelli)
+vanished after a couple of days; the French remained
+for a week, and when a French destroyer arrived at Split
+they were taken there, not as prisoners but as soldiers,
+bearing arms. Dr. Bogi&#263; was a member of the National
+Committee at Knin, and as such he wrote to a colleague
+at Drni&#353; to ask him whether the Italian troops were
+coming up from &#352;ibenik. This letter was his undoing.
+The reason he wrote it was because the population at
+Knin was extremely agitated by the prospective occupation
+and begged him to ascertain the latest news. He
+should have remembered, no doubt, that the Italians
+regarded this as enemy country and that to make inquiries
+with regard to the movement of troops was a crime. An
+officer came and asked him, in the General's name, if he
+would kindly take part in a conference; on reaching the
+place which was indicated he found himself surrounded
+by carabinieri. Their captain, a certain Albano, said
+that he and two or three others must go to &#352;ibenik to
+undergo a short interrogatory, and that as he would return
+in two days at the latest it was unnecessary for him to
+take any money, clothes or linen. As a matter of fact
+the doctor had, on the previous day, been warned from
+Split that the Italians meant to intern him; but he laughed&mdash;he
+had done so much for them and he felt so innocent<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+that it seemed absurd to run away. He could have
+gone, because he had a written permit issued to him on
+January 10 by the 144th Italian infantry regiment at
+Knin, which stated that he and his wife might go, whenever
+they wished, to Split.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">SEVEN HUNDRED OTHERS</p>
+
+<p>During the winter and spring over seven hundred
+persons, chiefly belonging to the clerical, the legal and
+the medical professions, had been deported from Dalmatia.
+The leader of the Italian party at Zadar told
+me that two of them had written him from Nocera Umbra,
+saying that this, their place of interment, was a health
+resort and that they were getting fat. He scouted the
+idea that they were under any sort of compulsion when
+they wrote or that they were pulling his leg. One must
+anyhow congratulate them in not being taken to Sardinia,
+as were the vast majority. Those who managed to return
+from that island&mdash;among them Dr. Macchiedo of Zadar,
+through the intervention of Bissolati, on account of Mrs.
+Macchiedo being at death's door&mdash;said that they found
+in Sardinia what they had expected of a penal establishment.
+Many priests were deported, on account of
+crimes which varied in enormity. A very frequent
+cause was that they refused to preach in Italian to a
+congregation which only understood Serbo-Croat. One
+must say that the Italians exhibited no religious partiality,
+for they treated the Roman Catholic Church just the
+same as the Orthodox. Some of the persecutions were
+so fatuous that one could only suppose they must be
+due to a misunderstanding. To mention only one which
+came under my observation at Skradin, not far from
+&#352;ibenik, where the Orthodox priest in his sumptuous
+vestments had led his congregation out of the old town
+in order to perform an annual ceremony in connection
+with the fertility of the fields. In what way was the
+Italian cause assisted when carabinieri broke up that
+procession and refused even to allow the people to walk
+back on the road, so that all of them, including the priest
+and the other church officials with the sacred emblems,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+were forced to go back to Skradin as best they could by
+wading through the marshes?</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">A GLIMPSE OF THE OFFICIAL ROBBERIES</p>
+
+<p>An allusion has been made to the Italian financial
+methods. More than one Italian officer, including
+Admiral Millo, spoke to me about the Austrian currency,
+which seemed to them one of the gravest problems. In
+Yugoslavia these notes were only legal tender if they had
+the Government stamp, and the Italians resolved that
+in the territories which they occupied the notes must
+have no stamp upon them. So far, so good. But when
+some poor peasant came across the line of demarcation
+from Croatia or else landed somewhere in a boat the
+Italians were not making good propaganda for themselves
+when they seized the notes, tore them up and
+refused to give their victim a receipt. One poor fellow
+whom I know of came with his mother along that
+wonderful road which the Austrians built over the
+mountains and down to Obrovac. He had some serious
+affection of the eyes and was compelled to go to Zadar
+to consult an oculist. He took with him practically
+all his fortune, as he and his mother did not know what
+otherwise to do with it. They had never yet made use
+of a bank. Well, the Italians tore up the notes and told
+him testily to go about his business. The same thing
+happened to the following persons:</p>
+
+
+<table summary="statistics" style="font-size: 90%" cellpadding="1">
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>Crowns.</td></tr>
+
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">1.</td><td> March</td><td class="rightalign"> 22,</td><td> 1919.</td><td class="leftalign"> Bogdan Babovi&#263;, son of Radovan,
+of Montenegro,</td><td> was robbed of</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 1,348</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">2.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 22,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Peter Luk&#353;i&#263;, son of Stephen of
+Spi&#263;,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span>"</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 1,800</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">3.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 30,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Marijan &#352;evelj, of Tu&#269;epa,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 3,530</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">4.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 31,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Frano Franki&#263; and Ivanica
+Petri&#269;evi&#263;,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 12,000</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">5.</td><td> April</td><td class="rightalign"> 8,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Stephen Vuku&#353;i&#263;, son of Peter,
+of Katuna,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 4,758</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">6.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 8,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Nikola Cike&#353;, son of Mate, of
+&#381;e&#382;evice,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 3,071</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">7.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 8,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Martinis Jozo, son of the late
+Nikola, of Komi&#382;a,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 6,332</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">8.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 8,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Jure Rubi&#263;, son of the late Peter,
+of Zadvarje</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 6,030</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">9.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 8,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Mato &#352;kari&#269;i&#263;, son of Stephen,
+of Podgrazza,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 500</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">10.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 8,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Mihovil &#352;arac, son of the late Crowns.
+Marko, of Split,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 300<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">11.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 11,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Ilika Kutlja&#269;a, son of the late
+Peter, of &#268;ista,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 600</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">12.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 13,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Marko &#268;aljku&#353;i&#263;, son of the
+late Ante, of &#352;estanova,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 11,000</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">13.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 14,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Damjan Udovi&#269;i&#263;, son of Jakov,
+of Imotski,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 3,200</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">14.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 16,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Antun Radi&#263;, son of Peter, of
+Trogir,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 62,000</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">15.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 16,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Madalena Kugmi&#263;, widow of
+Nikola, of Split,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 1,000</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">16.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 17,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Pero Juri&#263;, son of Abram, of
+Ostrozac,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 2,285</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">17.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 19,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Jakov Jurkovi&#263;, son of Mi&#353;ko</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td rowspan="3" style="text-align: left; width: 0.5em"><span style="font-size: 300%">&#65373;</span></td><td class="rightalign"></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">18.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 19,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Mate Raji&#263;, son of Ilija,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 8,140</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">19.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 19,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Jerko Reji&#263;, son of Luke,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td class="rightalign"></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">20.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 19,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Josip Kolumbur, son of Marko,
+of Livno,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 25,000</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">21.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 25,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Zorka Aljinovi&#263;, of Split,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 600</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">22.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 28,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Ana &#381;i&#382;ak, of Split,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 1,900</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">23.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 29,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Nikolina Rastor, of Split,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 1,800</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">24.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 30,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Antica Mili&#263;, of Split,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 5,000</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">25.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 24,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Tomislav Novak, son of Mate,
+of Hvar,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 3,000</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="rightalign">26.</td><td> "</td><td class="rightalign"> 24,</td><td> "</td><td class="leftalign"> Gjuran Arif, of Livno,</td><td><span style="padding-right: 2em">"</span> "</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rightalign"> 2,200</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>Total</td><td class="rightalign" style="border-top: solid black 1px; border-bottom: solid black 2px">136,794</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>These were the complaints over a period of a month,
+which were received by the Provincial (Yugoslav)
+Government at Split. One has to take their word for it
+that the list is not fictitious. I did not investigate any
+of the cases; the Italian officers to whom I showed the
+list said that they were persuaded I would find that in
+every case the person culpable was an officious, ignorant
+N.C.O. The list is, of course, no more than a fragment.
+At Starigrad, on the island of Hvar, I was told that from
+the people, who were searched both on landing and on
+leaving, 40,000 crowns had been confiscated, and at first
+they had been told that the money should be stamped.
+A merchant whom I happened to meet during the few
+hours I was at Metkovi&#263; told me that he had gone to the
+island of Kor&#269;ula to his brother and, on landing, had been
+relieved of 34,000 crowns.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="section">AND HARSHNESS AND BRIBERY</p>
+
+<p>In Asia Minor we have another disastrous example of
+the Allied policy of allowing a disputed zone to be occupied<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+<i>ad interim</i> solely by the troops of one interested country.
+The chronic state of war which followed the landing of
+the Greeks at Smyrna, the atrocities, the charges and the
+counter-charges, were investigated by an Inter-Allied
+Commission of Inquiry; and their report, which was
+issued early in 1920 and was signed by an American
+Admiral and French, Italian and British Generals, laid
+the responsibility at the door of the Greek Higher Command.
+The Commission considered that an inter-Allied
+occupation was necessary, because the Greeks, instead of
+maintaining order, had given their position all the characteristics
+of a permanent occupation, the Turkish
+authorities being powerless. They also considered that
+order should be maintained by inter-Allied troops other
+than Greek.... No such Commission visited Dalmatia,
+chiefly because the Yugoslavs, in spite of endless provocations,
+displayed greater self-control than the Turks.
+But an Inter-Allied Inquiry would have reported that
+the Italian r&eacute;gime had not the marks of a permanent
+occupation simply because such methods could never be
+permanent: everywhere in the occupied territory it was
+forbidden, under severe penalties, to have any Serbo-Croat
+newspaper. On one island I found about fifteen
+gentlemen gathered round a table in a sort of dungeon,
+reading the newspapers which had been smuggled into
+their possession. This they had been doing for more
+than six months. Every letter was censored, all telegraphic
+and telephonic communication between the
+occupied territory and the outside world was prohibited.
+All flags, of course, except that of Italy, were vetoed.
+Admiral Millo told us that this prohibition did not extend
+to the flags of France, Great Britain and the United
+States; considering that it is on record when and where
+the flags of these nations were, if flown by civilians,
+ordered to be taken down at Rieka, despite the presence
+of Allied contingents, it seems scarcely worth saying that,
+as we were often told, the Admiral's permission, which
+was in accordance with the Armistice, was disregarded
+by his subordinates. Another thing that was very
+rigorously forbidden, especially on the islands, was for
+any Yugoslav to go down to the harbour, if a boat came
+in, and carry on a conversation with somebody on board.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+It would be tedious to enter into all the questionable
+and tyrannical Italian methods, such as the requisitioning
+of Yugoslav clubs, schools, etc., sometimes leaving
+them empty because they found they did not want them,
+the requisitioning of private houses, with no consideration
+for their owners, the wholesale cutting-down of
+forests, the closing of law-courts, the demand that other
+courts should pronounce no judgment before first submitting
+it to them. But, above all, what the Yugoslav
+Government at Split complained of were the methods
+they employed in the gratuitous or semi-gratuitous
+distribution of food, clothing and money:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="center">I</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Government of Dalmatia and of the Dalmatian
+Islands and of the Curzola Islands</span></p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 0em"><span class="smcap">Subject:</span> <i>Question of Food Supplies for the
+Civil Population.</i><br />
+
+<span style="float: right; padding-right: 1.5em">No. 43. <i>March</i> 18, 1919.</span><br style="clear: both" /></p>
+
+<p>To all subject authorities:</p>
+
+<p>I have heard that several commanding officers who
+have to distribute food to the civilian population have,
+by virtue of an authorization that they may save part of
+the entered amounts for the purpose of using that sum for
+propaganda, saved a conspicuous quantity without having
+the possibility of using it later. As it has been ascertained
+that the only effective means of propaganda is
+the distribution of food supplies ... amounts which
+are useless [for other purposes] and absolutely necessary
+for purposes of propaganda.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap" style="padding-right: 1em">The Vice-Admiral</span><br />
+<span class="smcap" style="padding-right: 1em">The Governor,</span><br />
+E. Millo.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="center">II</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Royal Government of Dalmatia and of the Dalmatian
+Islands and of the Curzola Islands</span></p>
+
+<table summary="signature">
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 22em"><span class="smcap">Staff. <br />No. Prot. "P."</span></td>
+<td class="rightalign"><span class="smcap">Section of Propaganda</span>, <br /><span class="smcap">Sebenico</span>, <i>April</i> 18, 1919.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The section of propaganda of the Government of
+Dalmatia, whose object is the rapid diffusion of Italianity<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
+in this noble region which gives at last to Italy the
+complete dominion over the most bitter Adriatic, has set
+before itself a vast programme of truly Italian action
+... it is therefore necessary to give
+these latter certain advantages ... it has
+been suggested that Italian schools be favoured ...
+that offices be opened for the gratuitous
+or semi-gratuitous distribution of food, that presents be
+given to the indigent population, that f&ecirc;tes and spectacles
+be organized.</p>
+
+<p class="right">[Signature illegible.]</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>These two documents give some indication of the
+plan of campaign. One might mention, by the bye,
+that during this period there was a great shortage of
+food-stuffs in Italy; large quantities were being sent
+from the United States. The Yugoslav Government
+at Split complained of the disastrous social and moral
+results of these proceedings. It gave rise to many
+abuses and to a clandestine trade. On the young it had,
+for example, at Split a most unhealthy influence; all
+they had to do was to go on board the <i>Puglia</i>, the Italian
+flagship, whether their parents allowed them or not, and
+there they were given both provisions and cash. As
+elsewhere in the world there are at Split a number of
+idlers and scamps, who seized this opportunity; another
+class of person, who had erstwhile been regarded as
+Austrian spies, did not hesitate a moment to proclaim
+that they were the most ardent Italian patriots. All
+these people were ready enough to give their signatures
+to anything in return for the Italian bounty, and to
+endeavour to persuade others to do so; in that way the
+Italians collected 6000 signatures, whereas the Italianists
+of Split were, at the outside, 1800; at Trogir, where the
+Italianists numbered 80 to 100, they collected more than
+1000 signatures.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE ITALIANS IN DALMATIA BEFORE AND DURING
+THE WAR</p>
+
+<p>To grasp the conditions at Split we must go back to
+the years just before the War. From the reports of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+Austrian Intelligence Officer, Captain Bukvich, we shall
+see what was the attitude of the Slavs and the Italianists
+respectively towards the Government, and hence towards
+each other. It may be that the very loyal, some would
+call it cringing, attitude of the Italianists was forced
+upon them by the great inferiority of their numbers.
+What they were aiming at, with very few exceptions,
+were the benefits of the moment, rather than those others
+of which here and there an isolated Italianist would dream,
+when between the smoke of his cigarette he saw the
+Italian tricolour flying over Dalmatia. If this lonely
+dreamer had gone to Italy before the War with the purpose
+of awakening in people an interest in what some day might
+happen, he would have found that most of the Italians
+had never heard of Dalmatia. But among those who
+had heard were the officials of the "Liga Nazionale,"
+which assisted the Dalmatian Italians to support those
+famous schools. In a report (Information No. 668)
+which Padouch, the successor of Bukvich as Intelligence
+Officer, sent from Split on September 25, 1915, to the
+Headquarters at Mostar, we are told that "an Italian of
+this place, with whom I confidentially spoke on the subject
+before the outbreak of the War, openly and candidly
+told me that in their Liga school one-third of the children,
+at the most, have parents whose nationality has always
+been Italian. The others are children of the people,
+of that class which on account of its humble social position
+has lost its national consciousness. He told me that
+the parents received subsidies and the children clothes,
+school-books, etc., gratuitously."</p>
+
+<p>The reports of Captain Bukvich were sent to his
+superiors at Mostar. No doubt a great many documents
+were destroyed just before the Austrian collapse, as the
+Government had ordered to be done&mdash;three boxes, presumably
+containing copies, are known to have been committed
+to the flames at Split, while at Zadar there was a
+wholesale destruction on October 31. Yet a fair number
+of interesting papers survived, principally at Mostar,
+Castelnuovo, Metkovi&#263; and Dubrovnik. In 1913 Captain
+Bukvich sent many reports to the effect that Split was
+completely anti-Austrian and that the Italian party were
+the only loyal people. On September 16 he said that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+the inhabitants believe in the coming of a great Serbia,
+and he substantiates this with numerous instances.
+"The students over thirteen years of age," he says, "are
+all Serbophil, and most of the masters, professors and State
+clerks.... The chief paper in Split is Serbophil and has
+been confiscated twenty-seven times between October
+1912 and September 1913." He reported on August 19,
+1913 (Information No. 211), to the General Staff of the
+Imperial and Royal 16th Corps at Dubrovnik with reference
+to the Francis Joseph celebrations of the previous
+day: "... only the public buildings and a few other
+houses were beflagged. One must notice the satisfactory
+conduct and the finely decorated houses of the autonomous
+Italian party." On February 27, 1914 (Information
+No. 62), he narrates that a big dinner was given at the
+bishop's palace to celebrate the centenary of the incorporation
+of Dalmatia into the Habsburg monarchy; all
+the chief citizens were invited to this dinner, but the
+Croat deputies, Dr. Trumbi&#263;, Dr. Smodlaka and other
+Croats declined with thanks. Dr. Salvi, however, of the
+autonomous Italian party, put in an appearance. On
+July 31 (Information No. 267) he refers to the mobilized
+men who marched through the town and were put on
+board ship. "The attitude," he says, "of the Slav
+<i>intelligentsia</i> was quite passive. The Italian band waited
+for the troops, a procession was improvised, great ovations
+took place, and enthusiasm was shown by the Autonomous
+party, who called: 'Hoch Austria! Hoch the Emperor!
+Hoch the War! Down with Serbia! Down with the
+Serbian municipality!'" A certain Demeter, an Austrian
+naval lieutenant, was a spectator of these scenes. He
+made some notes for the typist, afterwards embodied in a
+report to the Military Command at Mostar and marked
+"Secret No. 147." He relates, with unconcealed fury,
+how the Slavs not merely displayed no raptures when the
+War proclamation was read, but walked away in the
+midst of the recital and refrained from following the band,
+which later on paraded the town. Only the Italians, he
+said, exhibited the proper feeling. They did more than
+that; for with the same date, July 31, one finds an interesting
+letter from the "Societ&agrave; del Tiro al Bersaglio" of
+Split, which called itself a shooting club, but was not in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+possession of arms; it was, as a matter of fact, a gymnastic
+society with a political object. The secretary,
+Luigi Puisina, wrote on the 31st to the authorities, to
+say that they had determined to offer themselves in uniform
+for any service of a military nature ("per quei
+qualsiasi servizi di carattere militare"). Bukvich reported
+on August 3 (Information No. 268) that for the
+present these gymnasts will be used as special constables,
+and he adds, to one's astonishment, that this has caused
+the Slav <i>intelligentsia</i> to be still more profoundly depressed.
+Nothing could elude the eagle eye of Bukvich: on December
+17, 1914, he noted that the small boys in the streets
+were winking and smiling at each other in consequence of
+the news that the Austrians had been driven out of Belgrade.</p>
+
+<p>When Italy entered the War a handful of Dalmatian
+Italians&mdash;I believe six from Zadar and two from Split&mdash;went
+to serve in the Italian army. Five others, four of
+them from Zadar, were interned at Graz; with these
+exceptions the Italians and Italianists were very much
+more faithful to the Austrian Empire than were the
+Croats, hundreds of whom were hanged or shot or lodged
+in fortresses. The Italians, however, persist in charging
+the Croats with unbounded fidelity; in fact, it is one of
+their most powerful arguments. They themselves in
+Split continued to do what the Austrians expected of
+them: those who were of military age became units of the
+army, while the rest of them, with one exception, were not
+incommoded. The President of their club, the "Cabinetto
+di Lettura," that Dr. Salvi of whom we have heard, was
+not only most assiduous in addressing letters of devotion
+and fidelity to the Emperor, in promoting all kinds of
+patriotic Austrian manifestations, but as the particular
+friend of Mr. Tszilvas, the Austrian sub-prefect, he was
+wont to go down with him to the harbour and watch the
+embarkation, in chains, of the Slav <i>intelligentsia</i>. The
+only Italian who suffered this fate was a Mr. Tocigl, with
+whom Dr. Salvi had had a personal difference.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">CONSEQUENT SUSPICION OF THIS MINORITY</p>
+
+<p>One cannot therefore be surprised if the Slavs, on the
+collapse of Austria, regarded the Italian party, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+especially Dr. Salvi, with some suspicion. Since they
+had always placed themselves at Austria's disposal, it
+would be most natural if they attempted by a <i>coup
+d'&eacute;tat</i> to save the Empire. Yet this was the moment
+when they joined the Slavs and helped to turn the
+Austrians out. There was no notion then that the Italian
+army would succeed the Austrian; and it was not until
+Christmas that this army tried to enter Split. When
+they proposed to come ashore they were prevented by
+the French, Americans and British; thereupon they
+threatened to come overland&mdash;although the town was not
+included in the London Treaty&mdash;but again they were prevented.
+In February, on the occasion of a conference
+between the four Admirals, there was a demonstration
+against Italy, the commandant of the <i>Puglia</i> being struck
+and Admiral Rombo's chief of staff insulted. There was
+a widespread feeling of resentment at the way in which
+the <i>Puglia</i> was, as we have seen, availing herself of the
+baser elements in the town for the furtherance of her propaganda;
+but what put the match to the bonfire was the
+omission of certain Italians in uniform to salute the Serbian
+National Anthem. The Admirals held an inquiry, found
+that "officers belonging to an Allied nation have been
+molested." They announced that they would not tolerate
+a repetition of such acts, and that inter-Allied patrols,
+acting with Serbian troops and the local police force,
+would take measures to prevent them. On March 8,
+however, there was a renewal of the troubles; and again
+the Admirals made an inquiry. The Italian member
+of the Commission added to his signature that he disapproved
+of the findings and that he would present a
+special report.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ALLIED CENSURE OF THE ITALIAN NAVY</p>
+
+<p>"By general conviction," says the Admirals' summing
+up, "there exist at Split two political parties which are in
+sharp contradiction as to the future status of Dalmatia.
+The presence of Allied ships, and especially the Italian
+ones, has increased this contradiction rather than
+diminished it. On the day when disorders broke out
+at Split a few Italian sailors had made a small demonstration<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+a little before the incidents. Certain movements
+and words on the part of youths, sympathizers with
+Yugoslavia, offended the Italian sailors. They were bold
+enough to arrest two of these youths.... This procedure
+of arresting them naturally and inevitably moved the
+great majority of the bystanders and was the actual
+cause of outrages. This act was approved by the Italian
+Naval Authorities, who accordingly are to be considered
+responsible for these disorders.... Several civilians
+and Serbian soldiers were wounded." The report adds
+that some Italian sailors were armed with knives and revolvers,
+contrary to the regulations of the Italian Naval
+Authorities, and concludes with these words: "By arresting
+some citizens the Italian sailors have committed an
+illegal act, which they carried out according to instructions
+that were given them by the Italian Naval Authorities.
+Accordingly the Commission considers these
+authorities responsible for the injuries inflicted on the
+Serbian soldiers."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">NEVERTHELESS THE TYRANNY CONTINUES</p>
+
+<p>But in many parts of Dalmatia and the islands the
+Italians had no fear of such a Commission. Let us see
+what they had been doing in the neighbourhood of Zadar,
+the old capital. Apart from the usual prohibitions with
+respect to newspapers and so forth, the municipalities
+were dissolved and an Italian commissary installed. Their
+first task was to introduce the Italian language and make
+it obligatory, although the commissary's own employees
+would often be not more acquainted with it than with
+Hindustani. Eighty-five per cent. of the civil servants
+in the occupied territory were Yugoslavs; during March
+and April 1919 they were deprived of their salaries because
+they had declined, in accordance with the existing laws
+and particularly in accordance with the terms of the
+Armistice, to make a request in Italian to the Provisional
+Government that they should be confirmed in their posts.
+This outrageous order, which left hundreds of families
+without the means of subsistence, was not merely illegal&mdash;let
+alone inhumane&mdash;but was in contradiction with an
+earlier order issued by Admiral Millo, which was placarded<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
+throughout the territory and which confirmed in their
+posts all the civil employees. However, the Italians were
+unsuccessful in their efforts to obtain these signatures,
+though they did not abandon their watchword: "Either
+Italy or starvation!" They never ceased to persecute
+the peasants of the surrounding country and islands.
+Commands, menaces, blows inflicted by carabinieri and
+officers, houses searched night after night, and so on....
+In the second half of February it was intended to conduct
+a number of peasants, accompanied by Italian flags, to
+Zadar, so that they might thank the Admiral, who chanced
+to be there, for the benefits which Italy had bestowed
+upon them. An officer who in this branch achieved
+particular distinction was Lieutenant de Sanctis, the
+Commandant of Preko, a village opposite Zadar. Bread
+and Italian promises were dangled before these poverty-stricken
+fisherfolk and peasants; they refused to take
+part in the ridiculous demonstration, and in order to
+avoid being made to go they concealed themselves and
+even went to the length of sinking their boats. In the
+possession of a peasant at Preko, &#352;ime &#352;ari&#263; Mazi&#263;, were
+found some banknotes with a Yugoslav stamp on them
+and a very small French flag; for these transgressions
+de Sanctis ordered first that he should receive a box on
+the ears, after which he was bound, thrown into prison,
+and there flogged by carabinieri who, as two doctors
+afterwards certified, inflicted serious injuries upon his
+hands, which they beat with chains. For the same
+reasons and at the same place a peasant called Mate
+Lon&#269;ar was imprisoned and wounded with a bayonet.
+On March 2 at Preko the Italians, enraged because the
+people had not come to their demonstration, dispersed
+with sticks all those who were assembled in front of the
+church, and prevented the Mass from being celebrated.
+On March 29 the aforementioned Lon&#269;ar was condemned
+to three years' imprisonment because 11,780 crowns,
+unstamped notes, had been found on him; the notes, of
+course, were confiscated. Such notes, by the way, were
+given or received in payment by Italian merchants at a
+discount of 10 per cent., 15 per cent. or 20 per cent. Even
+the military used these forbidden notes, and compelled
+the peasants at the market to accept them. In the night<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
+of March 15-16 six of the leading Yugoslavs of Zadar,
+who had not ceased to advise the people to bear their
+present misfortunes in patience, were suddenly arrested
+and deported to Italy; they included Mr. Joseph de
+Ton&#269;i&#263;, President of the Yugoslav Club and formerly
+the Deputy-Governor of Dalmatia; he was a man seventy-two
+years of age and in precarious health. During this
+same night forty persons were deported from Knin, three
+from Drni&#353;, three from Obrovac, four from Skradin, nine
+from &#352;ibenik and four from Benkovac.... On the
+populous island of Olib (Ulbo) the abuses connected with
+the distribution of food were exceptionally flagrant;
+here the Italian officers compelled everyone to stand still,
+bare-headed, when they passed; they would not allow
+anyone to leave the island, and forbade the peasants to
+speak Croatian! On the opposite island of Silba (Selve)
+the schoolmaster, Matulina, and the priest, an old man of
+seventy-five, called Lovrovi&#263;, were imprisoned. The latter
+had told his parishioners, in the course of a sermon, to
+behave well during Lent and keep away from the Italian
+sailors. He was thereupon shipped to Zadar and thrust
+into a moist and dirty dungeon, where for two days and
+nights he was at the mercy of six criminals.... After
+having seen at Zadar a number of persons belonging to
+each party, I had the pleasure of meeting Dr. Boxich.
+It was indeed a pleasure, because this thin, highly-strung
+Italianized Slav, the former chief of the Radical Italian
+party, was full of the most fraternal sentiments towards
+the Slavs. If, he said, their peasants lacked education,
+one ought to assist them; not to do so was a sin against
+humanity. It had been the desire, he said, of his party,
+both before and during the War, to work openly against
+the Austrian Government, unlike the Moderate Italian
+party, of Ziliotto, which feigned to be very pro-Austrian.
+While Ziliotto was receiving high Austrian decorations,
+he was an object of persecution, and was obliged to go
+away and live for two and a half years in Rome. Ziliotto,
+he said, was Zadar's evil spirit, seeing that he had thoroughly
+deceived and betrayed Italy&mdash;so many of those who now
+called themselves good Italians had been very good
+Austrians, and would as readily have turned into good
+Americans or Frenchmen. So petty and local was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+Ziliotto's party, with no idea of the world or of freedom.
+In fact, I thought that if a Yugoslav had listened to the
+doctor's eloquence he would have overlooked a recent
+lapse or two, when Boxich, in order to prove to Admiral
+Millo that he was a much better Italian than Ziliotto, was
+alleged by the Yugoslavs to have committed various dark
+deeds in connection with a hunt for hidden arms. The
+Admiral also had told me that he was not pleased with
+Dr. Boxich. "At present," said the doctor to me, "I
+am isolated, and I am proud of it. This is not the time
+to found a party of ideas; the atmosphere is too morbid,
+too passionate. This is the time," he said, "for an
+honourable man to remain isolated and to stay at home." ...
+Several weeks after this at Sarajevo, I read in a
+Zagreb newspaper, the <i>Rije&#263; S.H.S.</i>, that Dr. Boxich,
+on account of having&mdash;exceptionally, the paper said&mdash;spoken
+the truth to a passing foreigner, had been deported
+to Italy.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">A VISIT TO SOME OF THE ISLANDS</p>
+
+<p>It was impossible to be at Split without meeting
+people who had fled from the occupied islands. It was
+also, in consequence of what they told one, impossible
+to set out with an unprejudiced mind. But, after all,
+we have our preconceived ideas on Heaven and Hell, and
+that will be no reason for us not to go there. I had
+become acquainted at Split with Captain Pommerol, of the
+British Army, a Mauritian of imposing physique and, as
+I was to see, of a lofty sense of justice. He had recently
+been spending several months in Hungary on a mission
+from the War Office. They had now dispatched him to
+Dalmatia and Bosnia with a very comprehensive programme;
+and, as I secured a little steamer, he came
+with me to the islands. [We hesitated to embark on this
+expedition, since the islanders whose national desires had
+been choked for so many months would probably display
+their sentiments in such a way as to bring down grave
+penalties upon themselves. But the Yugoslavs, both on
+the mainland and on the islands, were anxious that we
+should go; they doubted whether Western Europe had
+any knowledge of the Italian methods of administration.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+And if the immediate result of our journey would be to
+call down upon themselves&mdash;as indeed it did&mdash;a savage
+wind, they were optimistic enough to feel that it would
+eventually produce a whirlwind for their oppressors.] ...
+The <small>s.s.</small> <i>Porer</i>, 130 tons, was flying at the stern the
+temporary flag of white, blue, white in horizontal stripes
+which had been invented for the ships of the former
+Austro-Hungarian mercantile marine; on the second
+mast they displayed the flag of one of the Allies, and the
+<i>Porer</i> happened to be sailing under the red ensign. She
+had a Dalmatian crew of eight, including the weather-beaten
+old captain and the still older and equally benevolent
+gentleman who combined the functions of cook and
+steward. In addition to Serbo-Croat, they had among
+them some knowledge of Italian, German and even
+English. The scholar was the mate who, having had
+his headquarters at Pola during the War, spoke Viennese-German.
+His wife had died at Split after an illness of
+several months, brought on by the idea that her husband
+had been killed at Pola in an air-raid.</p>
+
+<p>The large, rather waterless island of Bra&#263;, which is
+nearest to the mainland, seems to be chiefly remarkable
+on account of its chrysanthemums, from which an insect-powder
+is produced; and the number of changes, no less
+than twenty, that occurred in the ownership of the island
+from the beginning of the Middle Ages down to the Congress
+of Vienna. During that period it was sometimes
+under the Byzantines, sometimes the Venetians, the Holy
+Roman Empire, its own autonomous Government, the
+Hungarians, the Bosnians, the French, the Russians (one
+year, in 1806) and the Austrians. It was not occupied
+by Italy after the end of this War, and Baron Sonnino did
+not ask for it when he was negotiating, before the War,
+with Austria.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">WHICH THE ITALIANS HAD TRIED TO OBTAIN BEFORE, BUT
+NOT DURING, THE WAR</p>
+
+<p>The Italian Government put forward the question of
+the islands for the first time in April 11, 1915. There had
+been no previous discussion, passionate or otherwise, as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+in the case of the Trentino and Triest. But now they
+demanded various Dalmatian islands, the chief of which
+were Hvar, Kor&#269;ula and Vis, with a total population (in
+1910) of 57,954. The Austro-Hungarian Ambassador
+reported (cf. Red Book, concerning April 14, p. 133)
+that a conversation between Baron Sonnino and Prince
+B&uuml;low with respect to these islands had been extremely
+animated, and that Sonnino had pointed out that the
+Navy and the whole country expected of him that he
+would alter Italy's unfavourable position on the Adriatic,
+where from Venice to Taranto she had not one serviceable
+harbour, that is to say serviceable war-harbour. And
+Sonnino added that he thought this was an opportune
+moment in which to rectify that state of things. On
+April 28 the Austro-Hungarian Foreign Minister, besides
+drawing the Italians' attention to the nationality of the
+islanders&mdash;1&middot;62 per cent. calling themselves Italian&mdash;pointed
+out that not only would there no longer be any
+question of a strategic equilibrium in the Adriatic if
+Austria were to lose these islands, but that the adjacent
+coast would always be threatened. On May 4, the
+Ambassador asked whether an arrangement with Italy
+would be impossible if the Austrians agreed to every one
+of Italy's other conditions, showing thereby what the
+value of these islands was in Austrian eyes. When
+Sonnino did not reply to this question, the Ambassador
+understood that Italy's participation in the War had been
+determined. But on May 10, the Austrian Government
+made up its mind to give up Pelagosa "on account of its
+proximity to the Italian coast." As a matter of fact it
+lies 42 miles from Vis and 33 miles from the nearest point
+in Apulia. As a strategic base this group of rocks would
+have no value, since the water is too deep for the construction
+of a harbour, and the sirocco rages with such
+ferocity that it flings the foam over the top of the lighthouse,
+which is 360 feet in height. This inhospitable place,
+with its population of 13 human beings, some sheep and
+goats, was inhabited in prehistoric days; when the excavations
+were being made for the lighthouse a variety
+of implements from the Stone Age were discovered, including
+a stone arrow that was found between the ribs
+of a skeleton.... But the Austrian Ambassador let it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
+be known at the same time that he would be prepared
+to make a further friendly examination of the Italian
+demands with reference to the other islands. His Government
+also on May 15 (Red Book, No. 185, p. 181) announced
+that they were quite disposed to reopen the
+discussion. However, on the 23rd of the month, Italy
+came into the War. The Italians had been explaining that
+if only Austria would give up these islands&mdash;which was
+as if you were to invite a person whose designs you suspected
+to come and camp in the hall of your house&mdash;then,
+said the Italians, there would be an excellent prospect of
+permanently amicable relations between the two States.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">OUR WELCOME TO JEL&#352;A</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the War was over, Italy disembarked on
+the islands which she had obtained by the Treaty of
+London. Something has been said on previous pages
+of the way in which she introduced herself and made
+herself at home. As we were sailing towards the pretty
+town of Jel&#353;a (Gelsa) on the island of Hvar, we left
+Vrbo&#353;ka on our right. The Bishop of Split had told me of
+a grievance which the Italian troops at that place had
+lodged with his brother, the mayor. Some of them had
+visited, for the f&ecirc;tes of carnival, both the Yugoslav Club,
+where they found many persons who could speak Italian,
+and the Italian Club, where they were annoyed to find
+that it was spoken by very few. As we came into the
+little port of Jel&#353;a, with the green shutters of its white
+houses harmonizing with the foliage of the cypresses and
+oleanders, we could see a crowd of people running round&mdash;and
+carabinieri running with them&mdash;to that part of
+the harbour where we were unexpectedly going to stop.
+There was some confusion, the carabinieri pushing the
+people back, evidently to prevent them shaking hands
+with us; and one small boy who did not hear or did not
+understand what they were shouting received a terrific
+blow in the back from the fist of a furious Italian. Some
+cries were raised in honour of Yugoslavia, Wilson, France
+and England, which may have been imprudent; but
+when a place in which there is not one single Italian has<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+been held down for months, has been forbidden to show
+the slightest joy on account of the birth of Yugoslavia,
+has been savagely punished for having a copy of a Yugoslav
+newspaper, has repeatedly been cursed and cuffed and
+ordered, at the bayonet's point, to execute some wish of the
+carabinieri&mdash;one cannot be astonished if in the presence of
+some non-Italian foreigners they could no longer repress
+their feelings. Some of the people had brought flowers
+with them, and as Pommerol and I plunged into the whirlpool
+and made our way towards the Italian commander's
+office, we had many flowers either thrust into our hands
+while the carabinieri were looking the other way or else
+we had them thrown at us, in which case some of them
+would usually descend upon the shoulders or the three-cornered
+hats of the carabinieri. Whenever anybody
+uttered one of the forbidden exclamations one or more of
+the carabinieri would fling themselves into the crowd and
+attempt, with the help of vigorous kicking, to reach the
+culprit. Thus, in the midst of a series of scrimmages, we
+got to the captain's quarters. We found him a very pleasant
+young man, keenly conscious of the difficulties of his
+position; as we afterwards heard, he was such an improvement
+on his predecessor that the carabinieri were convinced
+he was a Yugoslav and had been heard to mutter
+threats against his life. He had apologized to the inhabitants,
+and had dismissed one of his men who had hauled
+down a Yugoslav flag and blown his nose on it. For these
+men an extenuating circumstance was that they had
+been very drunk on the night before our arrival, as they
+had heard&mdash;it was in the first half of June 1919&mdash;that the
+islands had been definitely given to Italy, and this they
+had been celebrating. We knew that after an American
+and an Englishman had visited Jel&#353;a, in the time of the
+other commandant, some of the people were interned;
+the young captain assured us that he would do no such
+thing. And one could see that he would never imitate
+the brutality of his predecessor, who had caused a frail
+old man of sixty-six, Professor Zari&#263;, to be pulled out
+of his bed in the middle of a winter's night and taken
+across the hills on a donkey to Starigrad, afterwards on a
+destroyer to Split, from where&mdash;but for the intervention
+of the American Admiral&mdash;he would have been deported<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+to Italy; and all on account of his having written, in
+English and French, a scientific ethnographical treatise on
+the islands.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">PROCEEDINGS AT STARIGRAD</p>
+
+<p>At Starigrad on our arrival the harbour and its precincts
+looked like the scene of an opera, with an opening
+chorus of carabinieri. They were posted at various
+tactical points and no one else was visible. One of them
+advanced, however, and conducted us at our request to
+the office of the Commandant, a major who must have
+played a very modest part in the War, as I believe he only
+had three rows of ribbons.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> He gave us some vermouth
+and informed us that the population was very quiet, very
+happy. When I said that I would like to see the mayor
+he sent an orderly, and in less than one minute his worship
+stood before us. He immediately confirmed what the
+major had said with regard to the population. In fact
+the picture which he drew brought back to memory the
+comment of the Queen of Roumania who, when an
+American lady at a reception in Belgrade told her that
+she lived at a place called Knoxville or Coxville in the
+States, replied "How nice!" The good Italians, quoth
+the mayor, were distributing supplies among the natives,
+and with the exception of the Croat <i>intelligentsia</i> they all
+wished for union with Italy. I asked him if he did not
+think that, looking at it from the economic point of view,
+there would be some difficulties when the island's exports&mdash;wine
+and oil and fish&mdash;would have to compete with the
+products of Italy. But he said that one must think of
+the other benefits&mdash;no longer would the island have to
+bear the hated Austrian. It was all the fault of Austria,
+he continued, that after 1885 the Starigrad municipality
+had been Croat; since then the Italians had lost their
+school and their orchestra. But now it would all be
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>changed. He was clearly a product of the new dispensation;
+and he told me that as the ex-mayor was an
+Austrian of course he had to be discharged. Nothing else
+did this gentleman tell me, which was a pity, as in a
+message, presumably sent by him, to an Italian newspaper,
+<i>La Dalmazia</i>,<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> of Zadar, it was stated that in this
+conversation I had displayed a supreme ignorance of local
+questions.... Then we all stood up and the major said
+that he would accompany us down to the boat. I told
+him that I would join him there after I had seen some
+Yugoslavs, and Pommerol was good enough to walk away
+with him while I went round the ancient little town&mdash;it
+even has some Cyclop&aelig;an walls&mdash;with certain Yugoslavs,
+two lawyers and a doctor. One of the lawyers turned out
+to be the ex-mayor, whose Austrianism had apparently
+taken a less active form than that of his successor, for he
+had only been an Austrian subject, while the actual mayor&mdash;Dr.
+Tama&#353;kovi&#263;&mdash;had served, until the end of the War,
+in the 22nd Austrian Regiment. With regard to the
+events of 1885, they told me that this was the time when
+the Croatian national consciousness awoke, so that an
+insufficient number of people had remained either to support
+an Italian school or yet an orchestra. And now the
+number of Italian adherents was about 200 (out of 3600),
+and might increase if ice-creams were handed round in
+all the schools. One of my companions happened to live
+in the house of Hektorovi&#263;, the sixteenth-century poet,
+and we spent a few minutes in the perfectly delightful
+garden with its palms and shady paths and bathing tank,
+like that one in the Alcazar at Seville. Then we went
+on to the harbour where a number of the people were
+collected. Pommerol was in the middle of a group of
+military and naval officers and civilians, these latter being
+partly visitors from Istria and Zadar. Suddenly a woman,
+standing near me, threw her head back and cried: "Viva
+Italia!" when other people joined her she redoubled
+her efforts. I should say that about thirty people were
+gathered round the major, shouting for Italy, and he was
+obviously gratified. But then a much larger number of
+persons who had different sentiments began to shout for
+Wilson, Yugoslavia and so forth. The carabinieri rushed
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>among them, howling vengeance. A Mrs. Politeo, who
+was holding a bouquet, was flung down by them and
+trampled on. The lawyers and the doctor with whom
+I had been walking were all three struck over the head
+or on the shoulders with the butt end of muskets. (<i>La
+Dalmazia</i> wrote that I had been filling their heads with
+idle tales.) Children were screaming. I saw another
+woman, hatless, being dragged off by a couple of carabinieri&mdash;and
+a naval officer, who was disgusted, sternly
+ordered them to let her go&mdash;and they obeyed reluctantly.
+Four Dominican monks were next attacked&mdash;they had
+not taken part in the demonstration; it was enough for
+the carabinieri that they belonged to the Yugoslav party.
+One of them, Father Rabadan&mdash;an elderly gentleman
+with gold spectacles&mdash;was thrown down, struck until his
+face was covered with blood, and then dragged off to
+prison. The carabinieri were being helped by soldiers&mdash;one
+of these I saw in the act of loading his rifle&mdash;and the
+noise was tremendous. Here one would see a Yugoslav
+trying to tell one of the warriors that he had done nothing;
+then another ardito would go swooping on to his prey:
+one or two of the officers looked awkward&mdash;one or two
+actually looked exultant. As we steamed out of the
+harbour four or five carabinieri and arditi were running
+along the road parallel with us, others were climbing over
+the stone walls&mdash;apparently it was a man-hunt. <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads '(&#34;There'">"There</ins>
+are places in Dalmatia," Signor Luzzatti, an Italian ex-Premier,
+had been saying in the <i>Temps</i>,<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> "where
+Yugoslavs and Italians are mingled; but it is clear that
+in those circumstances the oldest and serenest civilization
+should prevail. Italy in her relations with other races
+has continued the traditions of ancient Rome.... It is
+their palpitating desire [<i>i.e.</i> that of Fiume, Sebenico, Zara,
+Tra&ugrave;, Spalato, etc.] to live under the direct protection of
+Italy." And on the next day a telegram was sent to
+Split from the unoccupied island of Bra&#263;, giving the
+names of twenty-one persons who were arrested, and the
+name [Semeri] of an officer who had helped to beat Father
+Rabadan and continued: "The carabinieri are still
+looking for Yugoslavs. On the occasion of the arrestment
+of the clerk Nikola Pavi&#269;i&#263;, the musket of an ardito went
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>off and an eye was blown out to Mr. Pavi&#269;i&#263;. Great
+terror prevails among the Yugoslav population." A later
+message, to the newspaper <i>Jadran</i> at Split, said that
+twenty-eight persons had been arrested and imprisoned
+in two narrow cells, which were overlooked from the
+neighbouring houses. There they were being maltreated,
+and for the first day being given nothing to eat. Everyone
+felt surprise that among the arrested was a certain
+Mr. Vladimir Vrankovi&#263;, as he was one of those who had
+betrayed their nationality. But after ten minutes this
+clumsiness on the part of a carabiniere was rectified and,
+by command of Major Penatta, he was released. All
+those who could get away from Starigrad were taking
+refuge in the villages. The message ended by asking
+for the intervention of the Entente, as the people's life
+was being made intolerable, and for the reason that they
+would not trample under foot everything which they
+regard as holy. But, according to <i>La Dalmazia</i>, the
+indignant Italian population sent to the Paris Conference
+a vibrating telegram, which begged for immediate annexation
+to Italy, and protested against those who in an
+unworthy and ugly manner had disturbed the place's
+beautiful tranquillity.... The prisoners were court-martialled
+at Zadar and condemned to terms that varied
+from four to eight months&mdash;seven of the accused, including
+Father Rabadan and two other Dominicans, receiving
+the severest sentence.... I hope the indignant Italian
+population dispatched, later on, a telegram of thanks to
+the Paris Conference for having ordered Yugoslavia to
+guarantee the position of the handful of Italians to be
+left in Yugoslav territory, and even their special commercial
+interests in Dalmatia; while the half million
+Slovenes and Croats whom Italy proposed to annex were
+not to be protected by an equivalent guarantee. It
+would be ridiculous to bind with such conditions a Great,
+Liberal Power.</p>
+
+<p>After this it was no great surprise to hear, on reaching
+Hvar, the capital of the island, that our further progress
+was impeded. The pale Commandant of sinister aspect,
+this time a naval officer, Lieut. Vincenzo Villa, showed us
+a telegram from the Vice-Admiral at Kor&#269;ula, which said
+that we were not to be allowed to speak to any of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
+inhabitants. "To explore the islands there is some little
+difficulty," said Burton in a lecture on the ruined cities,
+which he visited when he was Consul at Triest. Early in
+the morning our cook, who went ashore to see what he
+could buy, was immediately arrested by the carabinieri,
+who were keeping order very much like those "bravissimi
+citadini" who in the autumn of 1870, when many of the
+citizens of Rome were at loggerheads with the Vatican,
+arrested and disarmed all those adherents of the Papacy
+who showed their noses outside the Vatican's portals.
+Our cook was afterwards released by the Commandant,
+who allowed him to visit the market, escorted by carabinieri.
+After that we returned to Split, and from there
+to Zadar, in order to see Admiral Millo.</p>
+
+<p>One would like to know what the Admiral would have
+said if this interview had taken place a few months later
+when, in alliance with Gabriele d'Annunzio, he was in
+open, armed revolt against the Government of Italy.
+The dark-bearded, stately Admiral, Senator of the
+Kingdom, had not begun as yet to make that series of
+buccaneering speeches, and he courteously told us, more
+than once, that he could permit of nothing which would
+outrage public order. He was much afraid that if we
+went back to the islands we would be the cause of lamentable
+scenes; in fact he could not let us go without an
+order from his Government. "These islands," he said,
+"are not yet ours; we are occupying them, as you know,
+in the name of the Entente and the United States. You
+have the right," he said, "to go there; but, unfortunately,
+if you do, the population will give way, as they have done
+already, to excesses." Since the last thing that we wished
+was for the islanders to bring us flowers and cheer the
+name of Wilson&mdash;in view of what these crimes entailed&mdash;we
+suggested that a small number, four or five of each
+party&mdash;those who desired to be with Yugoslavia and
+those who preferred Italy&mdash;should in succession come
+to us on board. Naturally we should be unable to do so
+if we had to visit any inland place; and after a prolonged
+argument the Admiral agreed to this plan. We
+returned to Hvar.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE AFFAIRS OF HVAR</p>
+
+<p>The subordinate Admiral, from Kor&#269;ula, had come
+across on a destroyer and was kind enough to tell us at
+considerable length what were his views on local and
+international affairs. He frankly appealed to us&mdash;and
+his humorous blue eyes were radiating frankness&mdash;to
+survey the whole matter in a broad, statesmanlike fashion.
+But we were less ambitious; we desired merely to be the
+mouthpiece of both parties. Those who first came on
+board were the Italianists, and I hope I shall not be
+considered unfair if I employ this word rather than
+"Italians" for a body of men, most of whom are admittedly
+devoid of any Italian blood and whose Italian
+sympathies are of very recent growth. This class numbers
+9 per cent. of the population of the town. Their chief
+point seemed to be that the Church was opposed to them,
+because there was no room for clericalism in Italy (!);
+and the only other point worth mentioning was that
+Austria was to blame for the phylloxera which had
+played havoc with their vines. Among the Yugoslavs
+who succeeded these gentlemen there was an elderly
+priest, a canon, who related that some carabinieri&mdash;no
+doubt in order to display to all men that Italy had shaken
+herself free from clerical obscurantism&mdash;entered the
+church while the bishop was officiating, and hoisted on the
+roof an Italian flag. This canon, Dom Ivo Bojani&#263;,
+could scarcely be blamed if the Italian innovations did
+not appeal to him. He chanced to be looking out of his
+window on a moonlit night and noticed that an agile
+policeman was climbing up to his balcony for the purpose
+of decorating it with an Italian flag. The old gentleman
+protested, and was thereupon taken to the barracks,
+where he remained for one day. The Yugoslavs told
+us that the state of things was worse than in Africa&mdash;but
+that was a figure of speech; the facts were that the
+different societies and clubs had been closed, that all
+persons going down to the harbour had been forbidden to
+speak their own language to their friends on board ship,
+that three Croat teachers had fled to escape being interned,
+while an Italian soldier who did not know a word
+of Croatian had been appointed in their place.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">FOUR MEN OF KOMI&#381;A</p>
+
+<p>When we departed from Hvar the Admiral sent his
+destroyer to accompany us on our tour. She had on
+board a Roman journalist, Signor Roberto Buonfiglio,
+who was travelling in Dalmatia and the islands on behalf
+of the clerical <i>Corriere d'Italia</i>. The situation at Vis,
+the historic palm-shaded capital of the island of the same
+name, has already been described. The Italian Commandant,
+Sportiello, was a tactful and popular person;
+moreover the Yugoslavs were on the best of terms with
+Dr. Doimi, the head of one of the very rare Italian families.
+At Komi&#382;a, the other little town on that island, the relations
+between Yugoslavs and Italianists were not so
+cordial. But the deputation which represented the latter
+party comprised one man whom the Austrians had put in
+gaol for several years for forgery; a father and son, of
+whom the one had sold himself for the sake of rice, while
+the other had also been imprisoned by the Austrians for
+uttering false documents; the fourth and most innocent
+member&mdash;his name happened to be Innocent Buliani&mdash;had
+nothing to conceal except his fickleness, for in a
+short period he had called himself an Austrian, a Yugoslav
+and an Italian. None of these four was a native of the
+place, whereas the Yugoslavs who came to see us were
+natives who had risen to be the chief doctor, lawyer,
+priest and merchant. One of the Italianists, Antonio
+Spadoni, told us that the people were afraid of expressing
+their real wishes for union with Italy. This hypothesis
+might seem to demand some elucidation, but Signor
+Spadoni insisted on passing on to the "Workers' Society,"
+which the young Commandant had founded for the
+purpose, according to Spadoni, of helping the people to
+find work and of looking after their interests. We were
+subsequently told by the Yugoslavs that the Commandant
+himself called the members his "Rice Italians," for many
+of them did not speak the language and did not even
+sympathize with Italy. But on joining they had committed
+themselves to something that was printed at the
+top of the paper, which part had been turned over. It
+really doesn't sound very worthy of a Great Power.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+When some of the members, discovering to what they
+were committed, sent in their resignation, it was refused.
+At Komi&#382;a all the municipal officers had been discharged
+by the Italians, the reading-rooms and places of amusement
+had been closed, and the Food Administrator at
+Split was forbidden to send any food, lest he should interfere
+with the Italians' object in distributing rice, etc.
+Once he was permitted to forward some American flour,
+and the people had to pay forty crowns of duty on each
+hundredweight.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE WOMEN OF BI&#352;EVO</p>
+
+<p>From Komi&#382;a, the next morning, we steamed over on
+the destroyer to the wonderful blue grotto of Bi&#353;evo (or
+Busi), which surpasses Capri. An Austrian Archduke,
+we were told, had once waited a week at Komi&#382;a, but had
+been compelled to leave without seeing the cave. We
+were more fortunate&mdash;the wind, the water and the sun
+were kind to us; we entered in a rowing-boat the little
+pearl-grey Gothic chapel which Nature has constructed
+underneath a hill, and as we gazed into the blue-green
+waters, through which from the rocks below a fountain
+of most brilliant blue was rising, every time an oar was
+dipped the waters painted it a silvery white. The population
+of Bi&#353;evo consists of about 150 people, who mostly
+live around the little church of Saint Sylvester, two hundred
+feet above the sea. They occupy themselves with sheep
+and fruit and bees and fish, and with the vines that are
+even more famous than those of Vis. A good part of
+the population had assembled on a grassy platform high
+above the entrance to the cave, and as we climbed out of
+the rowing-boat on to the destroyer a much larger rowing-boat
+came round a promontory. Sixteen women formed
+the crew. They sang their national Croatian songs, and
+when they approached us some of them stood up and,
+while the wind played with their straw-coloured and
+golden hair, they laughingly threw flowers at us. As we
+left Bi&#353;evo the men and women high above us and the
+women in the boat were waving their hands; some of
+them were singing, others were shouting a farewell.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
+Here and there on the sunlit waters, rising and falling,
+were the flowers which had woven on the sea a gorgeous
+carpet. "Well," said the lieutenant-commander, "I
+admit that this is a Yugoslav island."</p>
+
+<p>I forget whether Signor Buonfiglio made any remark,
+but a few hours later at Velaluka he was most incensed.
+As our boat&mdash;we had returned to the old <i>Porer</i> at
+Komi&#382;a&mdash;sailed into the harbour a huge Yugoslav flag
+was flying from the summit of a hill, with French, British
+and American flags around it. The destroyer had arrived
+before us and the burly journalist was striding up and
+down the quay. "I protest," he exclaimed, as he saw
+us, "and not as a journalist but as an Italian citizen!
+I protest!" Between us and the front row of houses,
+which included the town-major's office, there was a large
+empty space&mdash;the inhabitants could be descried up the
+side-streets and behind the windows. De Michaelis,
+the town-major, was evidently a superior young man;
+as he poured out the champagne he told us with perfect
+frankness that the educated people at Velaluka were
+Yugoslavs. Suddenly there was a terrific noise just
+underneath us. We hurried downstairs and found that
+the soldiers in their excitement had fired off a machine
+gun into the wall. Half an hour later the firing could be
+heard from the top of the hill, but we never ascertained
+whether anyone was wounded. In this place the
+Italianist party sent to us an ex-publican who had now
+joined the police, a small trader and a municipal clerk
+who had recently been imported from Zadar. The
+Yugoslavs were a large landowner, a doctor and a priest,
+who told us that the people for the most part were refusing
+to accept gratuitous food from the Italians.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ON THE WAY TO BLATO</p>
+
+<p>We were anxious to visit Blato, an inland village of
+8000 inhabitants. De Michaelis regretted very much that
+he had no carriage, but a Yugoslav had a quaint little
+car on which he was learning how to drive and he was
+kind enough to take us&mdash;for which he was afterwards<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+deported to Italy. The good man made so much noise
+in changing his gears that our progress was advertised in
+the uttermost fields, and very few of those who bore
+down upon us came unprovided with flowers. Several
+of the bouquets hit Pommerol or myself in the eye, and
+the Dutch say that the best cause has need of a good
+pleader. But the people were so gay, waving their hats
+and running after us (they did not always have to run)
+and shouting for the various Allies and for President
+Wilson. I remember two small round-eyed boys who
+were not old enough to run; they were standing hand in
+hand by the side of the road, panting the magic word
+"Wilson! Wilson! Wilson!" There was a sudden
+contrast when we jerked into the village. People were
+not rushing towards us, but away from us&mdash;with furious
+carabinieri behind them. We got into the garden in
+front of the <i>gendarmerie</i>; one of the men was so enraged
+that he kept on muttering "Bestia! Bestia! Bestia!"
+In the Commandant's office we met Major Federico
+Verdinois, the town-major, who said that if he had only
+known of our coming this wretched scuffle would not have
+happened. Even as he spoke it started again; we leaned
+out of the window and saw two or three persons who were
+being prevented by soldiers from going down the street
+or from going anywhere. An officer was slashing with
+a riding-whip at a soldier who was particularly rough.
+"One can do nothing with the marines; they are brutal,"
+said Major Verdinois. At last there was peace, and the
+major said that an Italian deputation would come to see
+us. It consisted of six individuals. The Austro-Hungarian
+census of 1910 said that the Blato district contained
+13,147 Serbo-Croats, 3 Germans and 6 Italians; but these
+six were not all in the deputation, for two of its members
+had come from Hvar, one from Zadar, two were ex-Austrian
+spies and one was a Yugoslav, who hoped in
+this way to help his people. One gentleman deplored
+that he had not been told about our journey; had he
+known he would have told his peasants to appear. Another
+gentleman assured us that the peasants were afraid of
+declaring their real wishes. Of course a country whose
+friends call it the most liberal in the world could not
+allow such a state of things to continue, and a short time<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+after this the following Order was issued by the staff of
+the 66th Division of Infantry:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>
+No. 46. Confidential&mdash; <span class="smcap" style="padding-left: 4em">Very Urgent.</span><br />
+<span style="padding-left: 4em">Personal.</span>
+<span style="float: right; padding-right: 1.5em;"><i>June</i> 23, 1919.</span><br style="clear: both" /></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">To the Commanders at Benkovac, Obrovac,<br />
+Novigrad, Ervenik, Kistanje, Skradin,<br />
+Biograd, Nin, Gjeverske, Suko&#353;an And<br />
+Karin.</span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">To the Command of the Royal Divisions.</span></p>
+
+<p>It is necessary to bring about, with no delay and very
+discreetly, the dispatch of messages to the Prime Minister
+Nitti and to the Minister of Foreign Affairs Tittoni from
+the mayor, from societies, etc., of this garrison, expressing
+the people's keen desire to be annexed to Italy.</p>
+
+<p>A copy of said telegram should be transmitted to me.</p>
+
+<table summary="signature">
+<tr><td style="padding-right: 10em"><span class="smcap">The Major:</span><br /> <span class="smcap" style="padding-left: 6em">Foresi.</span></td><td><span class="smcap">The Major-General:</span><br /> <span class="smcap" style="padding-left: 8em">Squillace.</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>To return to the events at Blato&mdash;while we were
+waiting for the Yugoslavs a woman made her way as far
+as the corridor, flung herself down on her knees and
+entreated us to protect her. Major Verdinois gave us his
+word of honour that no Yugoslav with whom we spoke
+would, for that reason, be arrested. Perhaps he was
+overruled by his superior officers&mdash;at all events he arrested
+and deported to Italy, in the night of June 19, no less than
+ten persons, that is, all the Yugoslavs who spoke to us at
+Blato, with two exceptions. [We cabled this to the Paris
+Conference, and after some delay the unfortunate men
+were repatriated.]</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">WHAT THE MAJOR SAID</p>
+
+<p>For what happened before our arrival I am indebted
+to the chemist Radimiri, from whose report the following
+is an extract: "At ten in the morning Major Verdinois
+had summoned to his office the communal doctor, Moretti,
+and the secretary, Draguni&#263;, both of them Yugoslavs.
+He told them that two Englishmen who were cruising
+about in the <i>Porer</i> would very likely be coming up that
+afternoon to Blato and he would permit no sort of demonstration.
+The doctor, he said, would be held responsible<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+for any disorder; and as Moretti was about to make this
+known to the people, who were just coming out of church,
+the Italian adjutant approached him with a paper and
+ordered him to read it to the Yugoslavs. This document&mdash;it
+has been preserved&mdash;is in the Serbo-Croat language
+and was given to the doctor because the adjutant, who
+did not know the language, mistook it for another one.
+<ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'If was'">It was</ins> an exhortation to the people, urging them to
+have nothing more to do with the Yugoslav <i>intelligentsia</i>,
+which had made a great deal of money during the War.
+'And you have given your blood for four and a half years
+and what has been your benefit?' Dr. Moretti made a
+personal appeal for the maintenance of order, and the
+people, having called out 'Long live Wilson!' went their
+divers ways in peace. Nevertheless three platoons
+appeared, each with one officer and one N.C.O. The
+adjutant's platoon distinguished itself, for while the
+arditi attacked anyone they saw, including women and
+children, with the butt end of their muskets, Lieut.
+Giovanoni laid about him with a dog-whip. Several of
+the soldiers made for a group of four young fellows;
+three of them escaped and the fourth, Peter Kraljevi&#263;,
+was struck with a rifle so severely across the face that he
+was bathed in blood. As he tried to defend himself he
+was shot at from a distance of three paces: one bullet
+went through his nose, another wounded him in the
+forehead. He fell to the ground, and a teacher, Mrs.
+Maria Grubisi&#263;, who had witnessed the whole incident,
+sank down unconscious at his side and was covered with
+his blood. Various other people were injured&mdash;three
+little girls received rifle shots in their bodies. All the
+main streets were shut off and eight machine guns were
+placed in readiness. But the people were not to be
+intimidated, and when the Englishmen arrived their
+national consciousness was displayed. As a result Peter
+&#268;arap was knocked unconscious with a mighty blow of
+a musket, the fourteen-year-old Joseph Sule&#382;i&#263; had a
+similar experience, and among many others who were
+assaulted we will only mention an ex-official, Anthony
+Pi&#382;tuli&#263;, a man of sixty, who was struck twice with a
+rifle on his stomach and then prevented from going home
+but chased out into the fields.... It seemed as if it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+would be impossible for our people to have a conversation
+with the Englishmen, but at last twenty men and twelve
+girls managed to reach that house...."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE PROTEST OF AN ITALIAN JOURNALIST</p>
+
+<p>I would also give Signor Buonfiglio's dispatch from
+this island&mdash;it appeared in the <i>Corriere d'Italia</i> of June 16&mdash;but
+more than three-quarters of it is devoted to an account
+of some Dalmatian delegates who were received, during
+the War, by Francis Joseph and expressed their loyalty.
+The deputation was introduced by Dr. Iv&#269;evi&#263;, a Croat;
+and if Signor Buonfiglio wants us to deduce from this
+how ardently the Croats loved the Habsburgs he will
+have to give some other explanation for the very loyal
+speeches of his countryman, Dr. Ziliotto of Zadar. But
+I presume that his editor did not send Signor Buonfiglio
+on this journey to the end that he should write of what
+official speakers saw fit to say during the War. As for
+the incidents we witnessed and the islanders' aspirations,
+he merely says that their welcome to us was an artificial
+affair which the Yugoslav committees, with extreme
+effort, had organized&mdash;and I don't think that that is a
+very illuminating observation.</p>
+
+<p>We learned that on arriving in Blato the Italians
+dissolved the town council, on account of its incapacity
+to do the work. However, a military man to whom it was
+handed over gave his opinion that he had never seen a
+better administration.... Out of all that we were told,
+I will relate the following: some Italian soldiers were
+playing football, and when they kicked the ball into a
+maize-field and continued to play amid the maize, the
+farmers asked them to desist. Two officers and forty
+men were present; they fell upon the three farmers, and
+when finally the major commanded them to stop, they
+dragged them to the barracks and thrashed them so that
+the people in adjacent houses heard them all the night.</p>
+
+<p>On our way to the minute harbour of Pregorica, where
+the <i>Porer</i> was waiting for us, we had a repetition of the
+scenes enacted between Velaluka and Blato; and a
+number of young men, heedless of the risks they ran,
+rushed down the mountain-side to Pregorica by the shortcuts.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+In the harbour were some carabinieri, as well as
+our escorting destroyer. We therefore had to leave without
+delay, lest the young patriots should come into contact
+with the carabinieri. So very hastily and in a very
+illegible scrawl I copied the original letter given on
+November 4, 1918, by Lieut. Poggi to the people of
+Velaluka: "We Italians," it said, "have come to Velaluka
+as the friends of Yugoslavia and of the Entente.
+We have come as friends and not as foes, and as such I
+ask you to accept us. We are hoisting our flag together
+with that of Yugoslavia, and with your friendly consent
+we will keep it there until the question of the general
+peace is definitely arranged, according to your and our
+... according to the principles of ..." The two
+missing words are illegible.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">INTERESTING DELEGATES</p>
+
+<p>Lying off Kor&#269;ula, that evening, we received the usual
+delegates. One of the Italians, Dr. Benussi, said in a
+trembling, tearful voice that the Italians were far too good.
+And while we were hearing from one of his colleagues
+what were his views on the subject of a plebiscite, Dr.
+Benussi moaned unceasingly, "I wish I had not come!
+I wish I had not come!" He considered that it was
+outrageous of us to allude to plebiscites. The Yugoslavs
+did not tell us anything very thrilling; the Italian
+authorities persisted in writing to the peasants in Italian,
+of which they scarcely understand a word. What a pity
+that this is not their most serious fault! A barrister
+called Dr. Pero Cvili&#269;evi&#263; came, with a companion, to
+see us the next day, before breakfast. He said that they,
+like most people on the island, were Croats; and he and
+his friend belonged to the Serbo-Croat party, which was,
+he said, a righteous, though rather a small party, as
+the island had been gravely handicapped by the support
+which Austria gave the Serbs. "And now," he added&mdash;it
+seemed a trifle illogical&mdash;"the people are all very contented.
+Believe me," he said. Furthermore, he volunteered
+the information that the law was being administered
+in the name of the Entente and the United States.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+It may show a distinct bias on our part, but I fear we
+asked him whether the blows from the butt end of muskets
+were being applied under the same sanction.... When
+we paid our formal visit to the Commandant at his office
+on the quay he did not ask if we would care to go to one
+of the Italian schools. An American journalist had made
+a speech in Rome, describing how he had been taken
+to a school at Kor&#269;ula, how the mistress had allowed
+him to ask the children if they knew Italian, how they
+had raised their hands, and how this had convinced him
+that Dalmatia should become Italian. Apparently that
+journalist had not been told that prior to the War this
+town of some 2000 inhabitants was provided with five
+schools in which not a single child spoke Italian, and
+with one school subsidized by the Liga Nazionale which&mdash;as
+in Albania&mdash;lured its pupils by gifts of clothing,
+books, etc. The teachers, from the Trentino, knew not
+a word of Serbo-Croat and the children not a word of
+Italian. But not very much harm was done, as the
+population considered it shameful to attend this school,
+and the bribes never succeeded in attracting more than
+thirty pupils, even when money was paid to the parents.
+This institution was reopened by the Italian army after
+the War, and presumably it is the one which the American
+visited. I do not know whether the schoolmistress,
+forewarned of his visit, had told the children in Serbo-Croat
+that a gentleman would come and say something
+in Italian, whereupon they would hold up their hands.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">A DIGRESSION ON SIR ARTHUR EVANS</p>
+
+<p>Seeing that the Adriatic problem, after all these
+months, had not been solved but on the contrary had been
+allowed to spread its poison more and more, one naturally
+wonders what was being done in Paris. The Conference
+was fortunate enough to have at its disposal, after the
+Armistice, the famous ethnologist and arch&aelig;ologist Sir
+Arthur Evans. This gentleman, whose distinctions are
+too numerous to mention (Fellow of Brasenose; twice
+President of the British Association; Keeper during
+twenty-four years of the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+D.Litt.; LL.D.; F.R.S.; P.S.A., and so forth), has for many
+years devoted himself to the eastern Adriatic&mdash;the second
+edition of his <i>Through Bosnia and the Herzegovina on Foot</i>
+appeared in 1877, his <i>Illyrian Letters</i> in 1878, his <i>Slavs
+and European Civilization</i> in the same year. He never
+ceased from that time onward to study these matters.
+"I think," he says in a letter to me from Youlbury, near
+Oxford, of which he kindly permits me to make any use
+I like, "that in some ways I have more title to speak
+on the Adriatic Question than any other Englishman,
+as Dalmatia was my headquarters for some years. Neither
+did I approach the question with any anti-Italian prejudices.
+I was so far recognized as a competent and
+moderate authority that I was asked by the Royal
+Geographical Society to give them a paper on the subject....
+Anxious, with others friendly to both sides, to secure
+an equitable agreement between the Italians and Yugoslavs,
+I took part in a series of private conferences in
+London which led to a preliminary Agreement forming
+the basis on which the Congress at Rome approached the
+question. There the Agreement was ratified and publicly
+approved by Orlando. How Sonnino proceeded to try
+to wreck it, you will know. Finally (just before the
+Armistice, as it happened) there was to have been a new
+Congress of Nationalities at Paris, which I was asked
+to attend. It was stopped by the big Allies, as matters
+were thought too critical, owing to the submission of
+Bulgaria. But I thought it would be useful if I went to
+Paris all the same, and I obtained from the Foreign
+Office, War Office, etc., a passport vis&eacute;d 'British War
+Mission.' Shortly after I arrived in Paris the Armistice
+was declared. Soon afterwards, owing to the departure
+of Mr. Steed and Dr. Seton-Watson, there was left literally
+no one among our countrymen at Paris who knew the
+intricacies of the Adriatic Question and the relations of
+Italy with the Yugoslavs, and the Yugoslav-Roumanian
+difficulties, etc. That being the case, Lord Derby asked
+me to be his go-between, and I had an immense lot of
+work thrown on my shoulders. I had gone to the expense
+of taking a large salon at the Hotel Continental, where I
+had private Conferences&mdash;the Yugoslav and Roumanian
+leaders there, for instance, discussed the Banat frontier<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+question, and the conciliatory proposals made no doubt
+furthered the final solution, with which they harmonized.
+When there was a serious danger of a clash between the
+Italian army and the Serbian forces at Ljubljana, knowing
+the imminence of the danger I made such strong representations
+to Lord D., which he forwarded to Balfour,
+that immediate pressure was exercised at Rome, and the
+Italians just drew back in time. I also was able to
+convey strong monitions to the other side. I used to
+let our Ambassador have a short pr&eacute;cis almost daily of
+affairs connected with those regions.... With great
+trouble I prevailed on the Yugoslav representatives to
+agree to a scheme, which I drew up, for the neutralization
+of the East Adriatic coastal waters, and this was taken
+up by the Americans&mdash;Colonel House inviting me to
+an interview on the subject, in which he expressed his
+approval. A copy was also sent to the F.O., and for
+this and for several other bits of work useful to the F.O.
+I received Balfour's official thanks. I had also many
+friendly conversations with prominent Italians in Paris,
+and in every way ingeminated agreement between them
+and the Southern Slavs. But, meanwhile, I exposed the
+Nationalist Italian campaign, to which Sonnino was
+privy, in the <i>Manchester Guardian</i>. Finally I went, at
+the end of 1918, for a short holiday to England, Lord
+Derby (with whom I always had the friendliest relations)
+giving me a diplomatic pass. When, however, early in
+January 1919 I prepared to return to Paris, where I had
+kept on my expensive rooms, I found difficulties in my
+way. Italian intrigue had apparently been on foot. I
+was advised to write to Lord Hardinge, and I told him
+briefly the circumstances. This great man never answered
+or acknowledged my letter, and it was only by
+making urgent personal representations at the F.O.
+that I finally got the answer that they refused me a passport....
+I gather that it was not only Italian intrigue
+but the feeling that they did not want 'damned experts.'
+And so they blundered on, and to this day"&mdash;the letter
+is dated July 17, 1920&mdash;"nothing is settled on the
+Adriatic but unsettlement."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE DUPES OF NIKITA IN MONTENEGRO</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile at intervals during this year there had
+been troubles in Montenegro. On three occasions the
+Italians at Antivari had endeavoured to extend their
+sphere of influence, but the armed civilian population
+had been equal to these emergencies and had each time
+thrust them back to the coast. At Gaeta, between Rome
+and Naples, a very well-paid corps was stationed&mdash;almost
+every man was either a commissioned or a non-commissioned
+officer. The Italian Government was
+asked by Signor Lazari, the Socialist deputy, for what
+purpose it allocated 300,000 lire a month to support these
+peculiar troops. They were mostly Montenegrins&mdash;relatives
+of Nikita, members of the five favoured families,
+persons who were stranded and so forth; likewise at
+Gaeta were a number of other Yugoslavs who had been
+liberated from their Italian internment camps, but many
+of them, when they discovered what was expected of
+them, revolted. Thirty or forty of them managed to
+escape to France, and others to Montenegro, as for
+example the man who for twelve years had been Nikita's
+porter. He and three others reached Cetinje one day in
+August 1920 when I was there. They had with them a
+picture-card of the sixty-nine officers of the Gaeta army.
+Every one knows every one else in Montenegro and only
+two of these officers had held a previous commission.
+According to Nikita's Premier, Jovan Plamenac, the
+Italian Government considered this as the Montenegrin
+army and regarded (rather optimistically) as a loan the
+money it contributed to keep it up. In driblets the non-revolting
+part of this Gaeta army was taken to the eastern
+shores of the Adriatic, for the purpose of making "incidents"
+in Montenegro. There was a regular scale&mdash;so
+much in cash for the murder of a prefect, so much for
+a deputy. One day the father of Andrija Radovi&#263;, a man
+of over seventy, was cut down; they waited until everyone
+had left the village to go to some f&ecirc;te in a neighbouring
+village, and the old man defended himself to
+the last.</p>
+
+<p>These emissaries from Gaeta, misguided Montenegrins,
+other Southern Slavs and Italians, made considerable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+use of the mischievous speeches that were sometimes
+heard in the British Parliament. They would explain
+to some poor, ignorant mountain-dweller that such great
+people in England were still discussing Nikita's return,
+and if he did return and they had listened to the voice of
+Radovi&#263;, woe be to them. Some of these wretched dupes
+would follow their seducers, who&mdash;I have no doubt&mdash;would
+not only have declined his decorations if they had been
+better informed, but would have placed the matter in the
+hands of their solicitor, as Gabriel Rossetti threatened to
+do if he were ever elected to the Royal Academy. And
+yet, after the character of the scoundrel King was fully
+exposed, his advocates, so far as I know, had not the grace
+to own their error. Of course there was in Montenegro
+a certain amount of uninstigated unrest; the wine of
+politics, which they were now for the first time freely
+quaffing, had gone to their heads&mdash;it was youth against
+age, the students were enthusiastic Democrats, the
+peasants were sturdy Radicals and they did not always
+restrict themselves to dialectical arguments. A certain
+number of people had gone to live "u shumi"&mdash;"in the
+woods." But the reasons that impelled them were not
+so much their devotion to the ex-King, as their own
+criminal past or their poverty. Others again had taken
+to this life for what may be called reasons of "honour."<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>
+Among the brigands was a man who was captured on the
+borders of Herzegovina, and before his execution&mdash;he
+had murdered seven people&mdash;he declared that he was a
+patriot and had done all this for the sake of King Nicholas,
+his victims being members of the domineering party.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>But when reminded that one of them was a baby, he
+hung his head and said no more.... There was discontent
+produced by the high cost of living&mdash;as the
+Italians not only held Antivari but even fired on French
+boats that were taking supplies up the river Bojana,
+it was necessary to revictual all except the new parts
+of Montenegro from Kotor. The lack of petrol, from
+which even the American Red Cross units were suffering,
+compelled the authorities to fall back on ox-waggons,
+which at any rate are not expeditious. By the way, it
+was the staff of another mission, calling itself the International
+Red Cross, which was to blame for adding to the
+country's troubles; after they had been installed for a
+month or two at Cetinje the people themselves, and not the
+authorities, turned them out, on the ground that they
+had used the Red Cross to conceal their machinations
+in Nikita's interest. The Yugoslav Government was
+held up to reprobation in the British Parliament and
+press for having hampered more than one British
+mission in the work of relieving the <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Montengrins'">Montenegrins</ins>. The
+resources of these missions appeared to be moderate&mdash;the
+head of one of them had a meeting with Colonels
+Fairclough and Anderson of the American Red Cross
+and suggested that they should provide him with the
+wherewithal for carrying on. But even if their resources
+had been scantier their co-operation would have been
+very welcome if they had satisfied the authorities that
+they were as non-political as the Americans. It was
+curious that those who in the British press ventilated the
+grievances of these missions were the same people who
+championed Nikita.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span></p><p>The Italians persevered in their man&oelig;uvres&mdash;Nikola
+Kova&#269;evi&#263;, the police commissary of Grahovo, sent in
+the month of May a confidential man of his to the Italian
+General at Dobrota, near Kotor. This man, who speaks
+perfect Italian, told the General that ever since 1916 he
+had haunted the forests as the leader of a band. Fifty
+persons, he said, had attached themselves to him; and he
+had now come in for a supply of arms and money, also for
+instructions. It would be impossible, said he, to endure
+the Serbian troops much longer in the country.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ITALIAN ENDEAVOURS</p>
+
+<p>"You must hold out for a couple of months longer,"
+said the General. "I can give you no money at present,
+but I can take you on a steamer to San Giovanni, where
+we have a camp of the King's friends; and from there
+you can easily go to Italy."</p>
+
+<p>"I have given my word of honour," said the man,
+"that I will not go without my people. So I must
+first of all go back to ask them."</p>
+
+<p>"In a military way," said the General, "the Serbs can
+now do nothing. They had tremendous losses in the
+war; and in two months the King of Montenegro will
+return or else there will be an Italian occupation. Work
+hard, my friend. I want you, in the first place, to set
+houses on fire; then to shoot officers and officials who
+are for Yugoslavia. You should also rob the transports."</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon the man returned to Grahovo and soon
+afterwards the French General Thaon, who happened to
+go there, spoke with him for two hours and invited him
+to his headquarters at Kotor.</p>
+
+<p>The disturbances in Montenegro did not cease; a
+country through which you could formerly drive with
+less risk than in Paris, was now infested by outlaws and
+those who pursued them. And Count de Salis, who had
+served as H.B.M.'s Minister at Cetinje, was sent back to
+Montenegro on a mission of inquiry. His report was not
+published, for the reason that he did not beat about the
+bush in his references to the Italians and for the further
+reason that he gave the names of those persons from
+whom he culled his information. This was a fine opportunity<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+for the foreign busybodies who were thrusting
+their silly little knives into Yugoslavia. "Count de Salis
+reports clearly and unmistakably," said Mr. Ronald
+M'Neill in the House of Commons, "that in his judgment
+the wish of the Montenegrin people is to retain their
+own sovereign and their own independence." When
+Sir Hamar Greenwood subsequently, speaking for the
+Government, threw out a hint that this was not the case,
+it was amusing to see how the pro-Nikita party lost their
+interest in the report. A certain Mr. Herbert Vivian sent
+from Italy in April 1920 a most ferocious indictment
+against the Serbs in Montenegro to a London paper called
+the <i>British Citizen</i>. He said that the Countess de Salis,
+while at Cetinje, was in danger of her life. But the lady
+has been dead for many years. I presume this is the
+same Mr. Vivian who in a book, <i>Servia, the Poor Man's
+Paradise</i>, trembles with rage whenever a Serb speaks
+admiringly of Gladstone.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">VARIOUS BRITISH COMMENTATORS</p>
+
+<p>Count de Salis's impartial methods did not always
+please the population, which was by a large majority
+against the former king's return and&mdash;as he clearly
+stated&mdash;heart and soul for Yugoslavia. Balkan people
+do not yet, to any great extent, appreciate your desire
+for truth or even your honesty if you should give a hearing
+to their antagonists. The Cetinje public, therefore,
+organized a demonstration or two against the Count.
+They would have preferred that he should reach the
+afore-mentioned conclusions without such an exhaustive
+study of the case. He noted that there had been certain
+irregularities in the Yugoslav administration, but it was
+inevitable that in those unsettled times the inexperienced
+officials would not prove equal to every emergency.
+These officials, by the way, in 1919 were not Serbs from
+Serbia, but for the most part native Montenegrins.
+"The country is occupied and administered by foreigners,"
+said<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> Mr. Ronald M'Neill, M.P. "Montenegro," said he,
+"is full of Serb officials." I suppose one must receive
+it more with sorrow than with anger if a man like Mr.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>Massingham of <i>The Nation</i> says that the Serbs "have
+deposed the Montenegrin judges, schoolmasters, doctors,
+chemists and local officials, and set up their own puppets."
+While he might have assumed that the long years of
+War had left the Serbs with a very inadequate supply of
+officials for the old kingdom, he would have ascertained,
+if his sources had been more trustworthy, that Gloma&#382;i&#263;,
+the very human prefect of Cetinje, is a native of Nik&#353;i&#263;,
+that Milo&#353; Ivanovi&#263;, the mayor, is from the Ku&#269;i, near
+Podgorica&mdash;and he was a magistrate under Nikita; that
+Bojovi&#263;, the prefect of Podgorica, is a barrister of the
+Piperi, while Radoni&#263;, the mayor, was an artillery officer,
+then a political prisoner and then the food administrator
+under Nikita; that Jaoukovi&#263;, the prefect of Nik&#353;i&#263;, was
+a magistrate under the old r&eacute;gime&mdash;he comes, I believe,
+from the Mora&#269;a; Zerovi&#263;, the mayor and an ex-magistrate,
+is a native of Nik&#353;i&#263;; that the prefect of Antivari, Dr.
+Goini&#263;, is a doctor of law whose home is between Antivari
+and Virpazar; that Bo&#353;ko Bo&#353;kovi&#263;, the prefect of
+Kola&#269;in, won great fame as an officer under Nikita, while
+Mini&#263;, the mayor, was Nikita's chief of the Custom-house.
+As for the doctors who left the country, these
+consisted of Matanovi&#263; and Vulanovi&#263;, who have gone
+to Novi Sad and Subotica respectively, as it is easier to
+make a living in those towns than in Montenegro. There
+are now three Yugoslav doctors at Cetinje (Odgerovi&#263;,
+Radovi&#263;&mdash;both of whom were doctors in the time of
+Nikita&mdash;and Matanovi&#263;, a young man); they are all
+Montenegrins. So, too, with the chemists and the schoolmasters
+and the post and telegraph officials&mdash;I am sure
+that Mr. Massingham will excuse me if I do not mention
+all their names.</p>
+
+<p>Since there are quite a number of Montenegrins in
+the Serbian administration and army, all the officers
+and men, for example, of the 2nd&mdash;the so-called
+"iron"&mdash;Regiment being of Montenegrin origin, one fails
+to see for what reason a Serb should be debarred from
+posts in Montenegro. It is unfortunate when people
+use the word "Montenegrin" without knowing that
+there is no separate Montenegrin nation, in the sense
+that there is a French or Italian nation. The Montenegrins
+are a small section of the Serbian nation, which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+sought a refuge among the bare, precipitous mountains
+and, unlike the other Serbs, maintained its independence.
+One should, therefore, to avoid confusion, speak of Serbs
+of Serbia and Serbs of Montenegro rather than of Serbs
+and Montenegrins. The purest Serbian is spoken in
+western Montenegro, on the borders of Herzegovina;
+those districts are ethnically different from the southern
+region, centring round Cetinje, which is the real old
+Montenegro, and the north and north-eastern parts,
+called the Brda, which in speech and customs are akin
+to the south. In western Montenegro, as in Herzegovina,
+the people, who live among their mountains on milk
+and its products, are very prolific, having families of
+eight or ten children. They are a very healthy, moral
+race.</p>
+
+<p>Another pro-Nikita, anti-Serbian writer, excusable
+only on account of his insignificance, is Mr. Devine, who
+teaches, I am told, at a school near Winchester and seems
+very unwilling to be taught. If he wishes, by producing
+a book on the subject, to show other people that he knows
+painfully little about Montenegro, that is his own affair.
+But he is just as ignorant with regard to his hero. He
+says that he "is in a position to state that there is not
+one single word of truth in the insinuations and charges
+impugning the absolute integrity and loyalty of King
+Nicholas towards his Allies." The King was, according
+to Mr. Devine, a defenceless old man whom it was very
+bad form to attack. But the King had been defending
+himself at considerable length not only in a harangue
+to his adherents in a Paris suburb, but also on various
+occasions in a newspaper, the <i>Journal Officiel</i>&mdash;and both
+the speech and long extracts from the newspaper are
+quoted, with approval, in Mr. Devine's book. This
+quaint person is so frantically keen to pour whitewash
+over Nikita that he has no time to listen to the main
+treacheries of Nikita's career. "Malicious falsehoods!"
+he splutters&mdash;and they can be traced to horrible pan-Serbians.
+He has reason to believe that they wish to
+make Serbia the Prussia of the new Federation; well,
+the Croats and the Slovenes and the Bosniaks and all
+the others cannot say that Mr. Devine has not warned
+them. My Montenegrin friend Mr. Buri&#263; stated in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
+columns of the <i>Saturday Review</i> that this odd gentleman
+had nourished the ambition of becoming Montenegrin
+Minister to the Court of St. James, but that the plan
+did not succeed. I never saw Mr. Devine's denial&mdash;perhaps
+it fell into the clutches of a ruthless pan-Serbian
+printer. Naturally, Mr. Devine would not care to be the
+diplomatic representative of a villain; therefore, when
+he is brought face to face with certain definite charges
+he persists in replying "not in detail, but from the broad
+point of view." He is so exceedingly broad that when
+an accusation is levelled against the King he sees in this
+an accusation against the entire country&mdash;a country
+which unfortunately, as he says, "alone of all the Allies
+has no diplomatic representative in this country." Mr.
+Devine continues unabashed to repeat and repeat his
+pro-Nikita stuff in various newspapers. "Il y debvroit
+avoir," says Montaigne, "quelque corection des loix
+contre les escrivains ineptes et inutiles, comme il y a
+contre les vagabonds et fain&eacute;ants...." Not long ago
+I happened to see that this egregious person described
+himself as "Hon. Minister Plenipotentiary for Montenegro,"
+but another gentleman, Sir Roper Parkington,
+a pompous wine-merchant, announced in the Press that
+he had become "Minister (Hon.) of Montenegro." Perhaps
+one of them has resigned, and our poor overworked
+Foreign Office will not be invited to decide between a
+Minister (Hon.) and an Hon. Minister.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE MURDER OF MILETI&#262;</p>
+
+<p>The Italians' stay at Kotor was drawing to an end.
+"We have no aggressive intentions," said Signor Scialoja,
+the Foreign Minister, "and we shall be glad if we are
+able to establish with our neighbours on the other side
+of the Adriatic those amicable relations"&mdash;and so forth
+and so forth. This he said on December 21, but if the
+Government was imbued with the same principles in
+August it is unfortunate that it omitted to instruct the
+responsible officers in Dalmatia. The Yugoslav commander,
+Lieut.-Colonel Risti&#263;, heard one night that the
+Italian General at Dobrota was harbouring at his residence
+no less than twenty-one Montenegrin pro-Nikita komitadjis.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+They were clad in Italian uniforms, and, as a torpedo-boat
+and a motor-launch were always kept with steam up,
+could be shipped off at a moment's notice to Italy.
+Colonel Risti&#263; sent his adjutant to make inquiries, and
+the Italians gave their word of honour that no Montenegrins
+were in the house. In order to avoid a conflict
+Colonel Risti&#263; then requested the French General to
+send an officer; but this gentleman was not received
+by the Italians. Four or five Montenegrins, with an
+Italian lieutenant, came out of the house and fired at
+the twenty gendarmes who now encircled it. The fire
+was returned&mdash;all the Montenegrins and the Italian
+were killed. After this the French police disarmed the
+remaining Montenegrins and imprisoned them; and on
+the following day, much to his chagrin, the Italian
+General was told to take up other quarters at Mula, so
+that he was separated by the French and the Yugoslavs
+from Montenegrin territory.... Not long after this a
+certain Captain Mileti&#263; was cycling late one afternoon
+on the road to Mula. Five or six Italian soldiers lay
+concealed, and so expertly did they murder him that his
+friends who were cycling a hundred paces ahead and
+other friends who were fishing very near the spot in a
+boat heard nothing whatsoever. It was eight days after
+this when the Italians had to go from Kotor and the
+neighbourhood.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">D'ANNUNZIO COMES TO RIEKA</p>
+
+<p>The question of Rieka had not yet been settled. The
+more suave Tittoni, who had succeeded Sonnino, was
+hoping with the help of France to hold his own against
+Wilson. Monsieur Tardieu thought that the town with
+a large strip of hinterland should become a separate
+independent State under the League of Nations. An
+arrangement was also proposed by which the city was
+to be administered by Italy, while the Yugoslavs should
+have a guarantee of access to the sea. These negotiations
+were still in a nebulous state, but certain proposals were
+going to be put into force which were suggested by
+the Inter-Allied Commission of Inquiry. With French,
+American, Italian and British representatives this commission<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
+had visited Rieka. One of the recommendations
+was to the effect that public order should be maintained
+by British and American police; on the very day
+(September 12) that the British military police were
+to inaugurate their service, Gabriele d'Annunzio took
+matters into his own hands. He rose, he tells us, from a
+bed of fever and, refusing to recognize the Nitti Government,
+he marched with the appropriate theatrical ceremonies,
+into his "pearl of the Adriatic." What he
+called the 15th Italian victory, or, alternatively, the <i>Santa
+Entrata</i>&mdash;the Holy Entry&mdash;was accomplished without
+the shedding of a drop of blood. Rieka, the stage of
+many fantastic scenes, witnessed one of the quaintest
+in the simultaneous arrival at the Governor's palace of
+a General to whom the Allies had entrusted the command
+of the town and a rebel Lieut.-Colonel who refused to
+recognize his authority. They seemed to be on the best
+of terms. The General (Pittaluga) informed the Allies
+that he was still in supreme command. Being invited
+on the following morning to explain the situation at a
+conference on board the U.S.S. <i>Pittsburg</i>, at which were
+present the Allied naval and military commanders,
+General Pittaluga informed them that he would be
+responsible for the maintenance of order and that nothing
+was to be considered altered in the government of the
+town. Forty minutes later, without consulting the
+Allies, he had handed over the town to a rebel and he
+himself, in his private car, had vanished. In a subsequent
+message to the Turkish Minister in Berne, sympathizing
+for the Allied occupation of Constantinople, d'Annunzio's
+Foreign Department informed him that "the Legionaries
+of the Commandant d'Annunzio put to flight the English
+police-bullies who were biding their time to snatch the
+tortured city." Opinions vary as to whether the poet-pirate
+was at that time acting in collusion with Rome&mdash;his
+defiance and their thunders being included in the stage
+directions&mdash;or whether he was a real rebel. We may
+assume that Signor Nitti did not countenance the buccaneer
+and that if officers and civil servants diverted Government
+cargoes into his hands they were not acting as
+Government agents. <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads '(As for'">As for</ins> large numbers of these
+officials, their secret understanding with d'Annunzio<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+received many proofs. On September 29 the <i>Era Nuova</i>
+reported that, two days before, Major Reina, d'Annunzio's
+Chief of Staff, was invited to Abbazia, where he had an
+interview with the Chief of Staff of the 26th Corps.
+Illuminating also is the report, in the <i>Era Nuova</i> of
+October 27, of a test case at Genoa, when a sergeant was
+tried for leaving his regiment and going to Rieka. The
+prosecutor demanded four months' detention and degradation.
+The court accepted the plea of the defence,
+which was that the court could not condemn or dishonour
+a soldier who was only guilty of patriotic sentiment.
+Moreover, it transpired that those who returned from
+Rieka, after receiving there a salary from both parties,
+were granted three weeks' leave and a reward of <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads '100 lire.)'">100 lire.</ins>
+One observed that when the <small>s.s.</small> <i>Danubio</i> left &#352;ibenik
+for Rieka with sixty waggon-loads of coal, the captain
+received his sailing orders from the Royal Italian port-officer.
+When d'Annunzio seized Rieka there was on that
+same night a solemn demonstration at Zadar, led by
+Vice-Admiral Millo, who was supposed to be governing
+Dalmatia in the name of the Entente.</p>
+
+
+<p style="padding-top: 1.5em">The Consiglio Nazionale Italiano of Rieka, that self-elected
+body which had so often told the world that
+Rieka was unshakeably determined to be joined to the
+Motherland, now took to its bosom the modern Rienzi,
+regardless of that which happened to the medi&aelig;val one.
+The C.N.I. could now devote itself to serious executive
+work, for d'Annunzio&mdash;in spite of or because of his fever&mdash;relieved
+them of the rather exhausting task of issuing
+proclamations. In three months he sent out something
+like a thousand. He did a great many other things&mdash;he
+ruined, for instance, the economic life of the town. Everything
+had for a time gone swimmingly. The Chief of the
+Republic of San Marino was voicing the sentiments of
+numberless Italians when he saluted the poet as a great
+Italian patriot. Such was the feeling of the majority of
+the army and navy, so that the Government in Rome
+was made to look ridiculous. "Mark well what I am
+telling you," said the poet to the special correspondent
+of the <i>Gazzetta del Popolo</i>. "I have received a call from
+a superior hidden force, and though the fever burns<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
+within me I am consoled, because the War has made
+me a mystic and I feel I am inspired from on high in this
+mission." D'Annunzio and his cohorts refused to have
+anything to do with the Cabinet. Signor Nitti, supported
+by the Parliament and the more responsible people, was
+openly attacked by the Nationalists and secretly by the
+profiteers and the newly rich on account of his bold
+taxation programme, by which he hoped to bring 30
+milliards of francs into the Exchequer. The Nationalists
+assisted d'Annunzio to win over the army; and in northern
+Italy there were many who realized that an army which
+can be moved by such an appeal can, on the next day,
+rally to Bol&#353;evism. No other troops remained in Rieka,
+the small French and British detachments having been
+withdrawn. Before this happened there occurred a
+repetition, on a larger scale than usual, of a few French
+soldiers being attacked by a body of Italian warriors
+who greatly outnumbered them. Some of the French
+were Annamites, than whom no more harmless persons
+can be imagined.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> And it was in order to avoid such
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>untoward incidents that the Franco-British troops were
+evacuated. D'Annunzio was left to do his worst. Rieka
+was one of the problems which the Peace Conference had
+failed to solve, and now they were in much the same
+inglorious position as the Great Powers who in 1913 warned
+Turkey not to mobilize, since they would not allow the
+Balkan Confederation to make an attack, and after the
+attack gave it out that the Balkan States would not be
+permitted to acquire any new territory. The Supreme
+Council in Paris was losing its prestige very rapidly. "A
+little patience," begged Tittoni, "and my Government
+will turn out d'Annunzio." "What we want," exclaimed
+Clemenceau, "is a Government in Italy!"&mdash;and the
+Italian delegates, with flushed faces, pointed out that it
+was not Italy which wanted Rieka, but Rieka which
+wanted Italy. They would do their best, although so
+many men in Italy were now convinced that Rieka would
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>sooner die than give up d'Annunzio. Presently, under his
+administration, it began to die. But this was not altogether
+distasteful to certain intriguers who were interested in
+the future of Triest. There might also arise, to the satisfaction,
+of other intriguers, an armed conflict with the
+Yugoslavs. But nothing could be calmer than the Yugoslavs'
+attitude. Perhaps these barbarians&mdash;as they are
+often styled in Italy&mdash;were confident that justice would
+prevail. Perhaps they thought that they could bide
+their time, and certainly what happened at Trogir was
+not calculated to reassure the Italians.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE GREAT INVASION OF TROGIR</p>
+
+<p>The little, ancient town of Trogir lay some twelve
+miles to the south of the demarcation line. Its inhabitants,
+with the exception of five Italophil families, are Yugoslav;
+and in the month of September 1919 the Yugoslav army
+was represented by eight men. Truth compels us to
+mention that on a certain night these men, instead of
+doing patrol duty, were sleeping off the effects of a carouse;
+and when the townsfolk looked out of their windows in
+the morning they saw machine guns and Italian soldiers.
+At 4 a.m. they had crept into the town with the help of a
+certain Conte Nino di Fanfogna, who had assembled a
+National Guard of thirty peasants, the employees of those
+five families. Conte Nino was striding to and fro; he
+muttered threats of death. Some of the chief men, such
+as Dr. Marin Katalini&#263;, Dr. Peter Sentinella and others,
+came together and were at a loss for some effective means
+to chase out the Italians, since they had not even a revolver.
+An American boat appeared, but the captain, when appealed
+to, said that he was only cruising and could not
+come ashore. In the town hall Count Nino, labouring
+under some excitement, dismissed the mayor; and when
+Ferri, the mayor, told him to go about his business, he
+protested that he was the dictator and would, if necessary,
+use force. Outside in the square the Italians and the
+people stood face to face, and suddenly a few Yugoslav
+flags were fluttering, and then an old man, Dr. Sentinella's
+father, climbed up to the place in the town hall where<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+the Italian flag had been hoisted. He tore it down.
+The soldiers were for shooting him, but the people began
+pulling the rifles out of their hands. Other soldiers, full
+of apprehension, dropped their rifles; the people picked
+them up, and those who were unacquainted with the
+mechanism cried out certain awe-inspiring sounds. Women
+and children&mdash;I fear this will not be believed; it is none
+the less true&mdash;women and children removed some of the
+men's helmets, and one group of children turned a helmet
+into a football. "I am a father of a family!" cried a
+soldier. "I am innocent, I have been deceived!" cried
+another. "O, Mama mia!" cried a third. They wept,
+they bolted into the courtyards, and the women showed
+them little mercy, for they tore off the men's belts and
+even struck them with their fists. A Mrs. Sunjara routed
+four men and went home with their machine gun on her
+back. In a few minutes the square was free of soldiers,
+and forty rifles were stacked in the town hall. Fifty
+soldiers on the quay were dealt with by a butcher who
+started firing at them; when they heard the shouts of
+the approaching crowd they threw down their weapons and
+fled. Two large motors escaped; the third was intercepted
+at the bridge, and although young Sentinella, who ordered
+them to stop, had forgotten his own rifle, they all&mdash;thirteen
+men and two officers&mdash;threw theirs away. It
+was suggested that the running soldiers should be pursued.
+"No," said an old man, "for we would kill them
+all. Let them rather go back without arms or helmets.
+It will frighten the others." ... Two hours later a party
+of Serbian soldiers arrived, but they were not needed,
+save for the protection of those who had thrown in their
+lot with the Italians. From Split, a few miles away,
+1500 volunteers, who speedily assembled, came with
+knives or agricultural implements or any other weapon.
+"The Yugoslavs must realize," said Nitti, "that it is to
+their interest to maintain sincere relations of friendship
+with Italy."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE SUCCESSION STATES AND THEIR MINORITIES</p>
+
+<p>The Yugoslav Government&mdash;as if it had not sufficient
+problems to solve&mdash;was ordered now by the Peace Conference<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+to accept sundry regulations as to the rights of
+minorities, the transit of goods, and an equitable r&eacute;gime
+for international commerce. The other States which
+had inherited the Habsburg Empire were, all of them,
+faced with the same demands; and they objected that
+to sign such Articles was inconsistent with their
+sovereignty. The most onerous item&mdash;relating to the
+racial and religious minorities&mdash;had been imposed&mdash;at
+America's instance, owing to the manner in which the
+Jews were treated in Roumania, despite King Charles'
+promises in 1878. The Yugoslavs, with a far smaller
+number of Jews and no Jewish outcry, were concerned
+only for the principle of independence. Not having
+persecuted the Jews they resented having to undertake
+that for the future they would act in a liberal spirit.
+"I will have nothing to do with tolerance," said the
+Orthodox Bishop of Ver&#353;ac to a deputation of Jews,
+when he made his formal entry into the town of Pan&#269;evo.
+And when they stared at him, "It is not tolerance that
+I will show," said he, "but love." Perhaps the Opposition
+in the Yugoslav Skup&#353;tina might have exhibited
+more kindliness in its attitude towards the Government
+and have refrained from rousing a storm against the
+signature of the obnoxious Articles. The Government
+and the Opposition being practically of equal strength,
+the Ministers, who in a calm atmosphere could have
+explained the realities of the situation, found themselves
+at a grave disadvantage. They could have shown that
+they would be assuming obligations which they had
+assumed already. In Macedonia, as any traveller could
+see, the time-honoured custom of persecuting him who
+happened to be the under-dog was abandoned; the
+authorities preferred to ignore the religious difference
+between themselves and the Bulgarian party, and as the
+difference consisted in praying for the Exarch instead of
+the Patriarch in the liturgy there was not the slightest
+persecution needed to persuade the Exarchists to become
+Patriarchists. Many who had been unaware of this new
+spirit which informed Yugoslavia and had fled with the
+Bulgarian army, afterwards came back to Macedonia.
+Nor did the Moslems complain: two Bosnian Moslems were
+expressly included in the Cabinet, and every consideration<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+was shown to them&mdash;at Ghevgeli, for instance, where
+building material was, after the War, so scarce that
+many of the inhabitants had nothing but a hole in the
+ground, the prefect caused the two mosques which had
+been destroyed by shell-fire to be reconstructed.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">OBLIGATIONS IMPOSED ON THEM BECAUSE OF ROUMANIAN
+ANTISEMITISM</p>
+
+<p>If the Serbs were to express their grievance against
+the Roumanian ruling class for having landed them in
+this position, the Roumanians would reply that the Serbs
+do not run the same risk as themselves of being swamped
+by the undesirable Galician Jew. The Roumanians argue
+that their peasants will go under if they are not shielded.
+"In our last great man&oelig;uvres," said the late King
+Charles to M. de Laveleye,<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> "it was proposed to entrust
+the supply of food to Christians. On the first day the
+provisions came; on the second everything was late;
+on the third day the whole army was dying of hunger.
+I was forced to make a hasty appeal to the Jews. They
+have great qualities&mdash;they are intelligent, energetic,
+economical; but these very qualities make them dangerous
+to us on economic grounds." Roumanians acknowledge
+that the agrarian policy of a few vast landowners and a
+submerged peasantry did not admit of peasants being
+made more formidable by increased education, and they
+doubt whether their country-folk, so fond of music and
+dancing and drinking, have it in them to rival those
+Serbian non-commissioned officers who, early in 1919,
+became millionaires by skilful operations on the money
+market in the Banat. Yet the Serbs are as much addicted
+as anyone to the aforementioned delights, and it is probable
+that the Roumanian boyars do their own people
+an injustice. But while the people were favoured at
+the expense of the immigrants&mdash;not always very effectively:
+the Jews have been prohibited from owning
+land, yet a fifth of the whole of Moldavia belongs indirectly
+to a single Jew&mdash;one would suppose that some distinction
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>might have been made between the more or less pernicious
+alien who is apt to get the village into his toils and that
+other Jew whose family has lived perhaps two hundred
+years in the country, who feels himself a Roumanian
+but is legally a foreigner. One Magder, a Jewish barrister,
+performed such exploits at the front during the Great
+War that he was mentioned in the communiqu&eacute;, a distinction
+only conferred upon two other soldiers. For
+one and a half years the official publications insisted on
+Roumanizing his name into Magdeu, after which three
+Cabinet meetings occupied themselves with the subject
+and finally announced that the error was not intentional
+but typographical. A French officer wished the
+Roumanian Croix de Guerre to be given to him, but
+Headquarters refused the request on the ground that he
+was a Jew. One cannot blame the United States for
+taking the initiative in compelling the Roumanians to
+modify their legislation, since the clauses of the Treaty
+of Berlin were merely carried out to the extent of naturalizing
+a maximum of fifty Jews a year, each case having
+to undergo innumerable formalities, accompanied with
+payments to deputies and others that rose to 30,000 francs.
+Many Jews volunteered for the army in 1913 for the
+sake of thus obtaining the naturalization that was promised
+them as a reward; but these promises were frequently
+not kept. A good deal of injustice occurred
+during the Great War: the <i>Moniteur Officiel</i>, No. 261
+(of February 2, 1918), printed a decree relating to one
+Kaufman, who together with two Christian soldiers had
+been away from his corps for twelve days in the previous
+September. Kaufman was condemned to death, and
+the others to five years' hard labour. When the King
+was asked to deal more equitably with the three men,
+Kaufman's sentence was commuted to "hard labour
+without limit," <i>i.e.</i> for life. It is superfluous to give
+many illustrations: at Falticeni seventy-two Jews were
+imprisoned without a trial for four months, though twelve
+of them were Roumanian citizens and veterans of 1877,
+while most of the others had sons at the front; at the
+village of Frumusica a major caused the Jews to come out
+of their synagogue in order to listen to a speech in which
+he advised the Christian soldiers to watch them well,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+as they were worse than the Germans. No doubt there
+were Jews in the Roumanian army whose patriotism was
+less than ardent&mdash;and who can blame them? In the
+69th Regiment a special corps of Jews was clothed in the
+discarded, dark uniform that was more visible to the
+enemy. In the 65th Regiment Jon Dumitru was paid
+14 francs a month for spying on his Jewish comrades.
+At the battle of Savarat, to cover the retreat of three
+battalions, a special corps of Jews was formed&mdash;one
+hundred and twenty-two men under a Jewish second
+lieutenant; all but three of them were killed or wounded.
+After this retreat the General, who lost his head, commanded
+that the survivors should be killed wholesale on
+account of self-inflicted wounds; but seeing that they
+were so numerous (and innocent) he pardoned them, and
+only executed two Jews, Lubis Strul and Hascal Simha,
+<i>pour encourager les autres</i>. A young doctor, 2nd Lieutenant
+Cohn, who came back from Paris, contracted
+typhus at the hospital where he was serving; afterwards
+he was sent to the 26th Regiment and kept under observation;
+it was most suspicious, said the authorities, that
+a Jew should return from France for his military service.
+A reward of 2000 francs was offered to anyone who could
+supply incriminating evidence against the doctor, but
+this was offered in vain. The Jews, by the way, were
+told that while they would be removed from menial
+positions in the hospitals they "would be tolerated" as
+doctors&mdash;and nearly a hundred of these doctors died on
+active service.</p>
+
+<p>The better class of Roumanians, such as Take Jonescu,
+is opposed to such methods&mdash;he was therefore charged with
+being in the pay of the Jews, although he was a wealthy
+man (a very successful barrister) whom politics made
+poorer. It remains to be seen whether the Roumanians&mdash;whose
+position with regard to the Jews is, partly through
+their own fault, not without peril&mdash;will be willing to put
+into effect those reforms to which the Supreme Council
+compelled them to subscribe. The Article in question
+will probably become a moral weapon, since the Roumanians
+regard themselves as on a higher level than
+the Balkan peoples, and will not desire that continual
+complaints should be made against them. One does not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+expect their prejudices and their apprehensions to be
+suddenly renounced&mdash;instead of judging each case individually,
+the railway administration, after the Government
+had agreed that the Jews <i>en bloc</i> could become
+citizens, barred them <i>en bloc</i> from that particular service
+by requiring that candidates should present their certificates
+of baptism. The Agricultural Syndicates have also
+introduced a statute which limits their organizations to
+Roumanian citizens who profess the Christian religion.
+Gradually&mdash;one hopes, for the sake of their country&mdash;the
+Roumanians will bring themselves to adopt a less
+timorous spirit, and to acknowledge that it is more dangerous
+to the Fatherland if a Jew as such is prevented than
+if he is permitted to hold the office of street-sweeper.
+From such lowly public offices, or from that of University
+Professor, no citizen should be excluded on religious
+grounds or admitted to them "by exceptional concession."
+And if a Jewish cab-driver at Bucharest is so
+severely flogged by his passengers outside the chief
+railway-station that he succumbs in the hospital to his
+injuries&mdash;a fate that overtook one Mendel Blumenthal,
+a man fifty-three years of age, in September 1919&mdash;one
+trusts that a newspaper article asking for an inquiry
+will henceforward not be censored. "It is true," said
+Dr. Vaida-Voevod, then the Prime Minister, "that the
+Jews still evince some reluctance to assimilate intellectually
+with our people or to identify their interests
+with those of the Roumanian State. But goodwill
+should be shown on both sides, and the overtures should
+be reciprocal." Thanks very largely to the former
+Liberal Premier, M. Bratiano, whose party was responsible
+for much illiberal legislation&mdash;one of his powerful brothers
+was popularly said to eat a Jew at every meal&mdash;the
+Supreme Council acted in such a manner as to produce
+a particularly unwanted crisis in the Yugoslav political
+world. Neither Roumanian nor Yugoslav need, in the
+opinion of Take Jonescu, have considered that their
+dignity was being slighted, for the tendency of the League
+of Nations is to limit the free will of each of them. The
+cardinal doctrine of the League, as Lord Robert Cecil
+has pointed out, is that its members are <i>not</i> masters in
+their own house, but must obey the decision of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+majority. However, the Opposition in the Belgrade
+Skup&#353;tina could not resist from using the delicate situation
+for what many of the deputies thought was a patriotic
+course of conduct, and nearly all of them regarded as an
+admirable party cry.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>The Defeat of Austria, as seen by the 7th Division.</i> London, 1919.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> <i>Contemporary Review</i>, February 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Afterwards Yugoslav Minister at Madrid and then at Washington.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> <i>Fortnightly Review</i>, June 1919.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Cf. <i>Manchester Guardian</i>, December 13, 1918.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> <i>Land and Water</i>, May 29, 1919.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> <i>Nineteenth Century and After</i>, November 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> <i>Au Secours des Enfants Serbes.</i> Paris, 1916.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Several old wooden warships, such as the <i>Aurora</i>, the <i>Schwartzenberg</i>
+and the <i>Vulcan</i>, were lying for years in &#352;ibenik harbour, where they
+were used as repair-ships, store-ships, etc. When the Italians evacuated
+Dalmatia they took these vessels with them, but whether on account of
+their contents or their history we do not know.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Cf. <i>Die Handelsstrassen und Bergwerke von Serbien und Bosnien
+wahrend des Mittelalters</i>, by Dr. Constantin Jire&#269;ek. Prague, 1879.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> It is instructive to examine the attendance figures at the schools
+of this the only Italian town of Dalmatia, as the Italians call it. The
+figures are those of the school year 1918-1919, and refer both to elementary
+and secondary schools:</p>
+
+<table summary="schools" style="padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+<tr><td colspan="3"><span class="smcap">Yugoslav Schools.</span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Elementary School for Boys</td><td style="text-align: right">Pupils,</td><td style="text-align: right">342</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Elementary School for Girls</td><td style="text-align: right"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span></td><td style="text-align: right">331</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Combined Elementary School</td><td style="text-align: right"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span></td><td style="text-align: right">222</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Higher Elementary School for Girls</td><td style="text-align: right"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span></td><td style="text-align: right">121</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Teachers' Training College</td><td style="text-align: right"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span></td><td style="text-align: right">70</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Classical College</td><td style="text-align: right"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span></td><td style="text-align: right; border-bottom: solid black 1px">469</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>Total of Yugoslav Pupils,</td><td style="text-align: right; border-bottom: solid black 2px">1555</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="3"><span class="smcap">Italian Schools.</span></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Elementary School for Boys</td><td style="text-align: right">Pupils,</td><td>250</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Elementary School for Girls</td><td style="text-align: right"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span></td><td style="text-align: right">221</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Higher Elementary School</td><td style="text-align: right"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span></td><td style="text-align: right">93</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Classical College</td><td style="text-align: right"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span></td><td style="text-align: right">157</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="schoolentry">Technical College</td><td style="text-align: right"><span style="padding-right: 1em">"</span></td><td style="text-align: right; border-bottom: solid black 1px">181</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>Total of Italian Pupils,</td><td style="text-align: right; border-bottom: solid black 2px">902</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>I do not know what were the facts ascertained on the spot by Mr.
+Hilaire Belloc which enabled him, without any reservations, to inform
+the readers of <i>Land and Water</i> (June 5, 1919) that "Zara is quite Italian."
+He added that "Sebenia is Italian too." If this be so, how comes it
+that in 1919 the Italian authorities found it necessary to terrorize Sebenico
+(&#352;ibenik)&mdash;which is presumably the town Mr. Belloc refers to&mdash;with
+machine guns and hordes of secret police and the very lurid threats of
+Colonel Cappone, the town commandant? I believe it is nearer the
+truth to say that the population of this town consists of some 13,000
+Yugoslavs and 400 <i>Italianists</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> This prelate died in December 1920. With fearless patriotism, said
+the <i>Tablet</i> (January 1, 1921), he "had defended his flock from the Germanizing
+influence of the Habsburgs and the more insidious encroachments
+of the Italians."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> The population of Veprinac, according to the last census, is: Yugoslavs,
+2505 (83&middot;7 per cent.); Italians, 24 (0&middot;8 per cent.); Germans, 422 (4&middot;1
+per cent.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Pribi&#269;evi&#263; issued a statement to the effect that the interviewer,
+Magrini, had put into his mouth the precise opposite of what he had
+said with regard to Triest and Pola. Pribi&#269;evi&#263; had told him that the
+whole of Istria, with Triest, should be Yugoslav. He reminded Magrini
+that a third person was present at the interview.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> The supplies for the Austro-Hungarian army in Albania had been
+concentrated at Rieka. These had to be guarded by Yugoslav troops,
+as the Hungarian watchmen at the port had disappeared, and the Russian
+prisoners employed there&mdash;about 500 men&mdash;had also vanished. In
+order to keep off nocturnal plunderers, the Yugoslav troops were told to
+fire a few shots now and then into the air. Is it not possible that the
+two Italian boys who, as Mr. Beaumont reported, were hit during the
+night by stray bullets and succumbed in hospital to their injuries&mdash;is it
+not possible that they were out for plunder and that this incident should
+not be used to illustrate what Mr. Beaumont (of the <i>Daily Telegraph</i>)
+calls "the worst characteristics of Balkan terrorism" on the part of the
+troops? During the twenty days of the Yugoslav r&eacute;gime their authorities
+sold, as they were justified in doing, tobacco from these warehouses to
+the value of 120,000 crowns. It was generally said in Rieka that the
+Italians in four days had given away six million crowns' worth, that large
+quantities of flour were removed until the British put a stop to this, and
+that the robberies were flagrant. These allegations may have been untrue
+or exaggerated, but individuals were pointed out who in a mysterious
+manner had suddenly become affluent; it would at any rate have been
+as well if the I.N.C. had ordered some investigation. Since they failed to
+do so, it is natural that gossip flourished. In Triest, by the way, even the
+Italian population is reputed to have been disgusted when about forty
+waggon-loads of flour and twenty of sugar were taken from the stores of
+the former Austrian army and shipped to Italy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Most people have assumed that this was done in order that Rieka
+should be left to Austria-Hungary, although they should have taken
+with some grains of salt this Italian generosity which presented the
+Habsburgs with a good harbour instead of one of those others in Croatia
+which the Italians of to-day are never weary of extolling. The real
+reasons why Rieka was omitted from the Treaty of London are, as the
+<i>Secolo</i> (January 12, 1919) remarks, perfectly well known. "In order,"
+it says, "to claim Fiume it is necessary to make appeal to the right of
+the people to dispose freely of themselves. In this case the same principle
+must be admitted for the people of Dalmatia, who are Slav in a crushing
+majority. But this is precisely the negation of the Treaty of London."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> The Italianist employ&eacute;s of the Rieka town council who took the census
+in 1910 asked the humbler classes if they were acquainted with the Italian
+language; those from whom they received an affirmative reply were
+put down as Italians. Had they, on the other hand, asked the people
+if they spoke Croatian and put down as Croats those who answered yes,
+there would, in the opinion of an expert, Dr. Arthur Gavazzi, have remained
+not one single Italian&mdash;certainly not the members of the Italian
+National Council&mdash;as everyone, he says, speaks and knows Croat. This
+is a fairly emphatic proof that the fortunes of Rieka are bound up with
+those of its suburbs and the hinterland.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Being the senior in rank of the Allied Generals, General Grazioli
+claimed supreme command of all the Allied troops, but this the French
+General refused, maintaining&mdash;much to the disgust of the Italians&mdash;that
+he was under the orders of Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey, who was then in command
+of the Army of the Orient. The Italians were so determined to preserve
+in their own hands the military supremacy that a very senior General,
+one Caneva, was kept in the background of the palace with the sole object
+of stepping forward if any Allied officer senior to General Grazioli should
+by chance be posted to the town. The disrespectful Allies used to call
+Caneva "the man in the cellar."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> The town of Yugoslavia which, after Austria's collapse, was stirred
+the most profoundly by its postage stamps was Zagreb. In order to
+commemorate the establishment of the new State the Croatian Post
+Office published four stamps, which were on sale on November 29. The
+whole edition consisted of 100,000 stamps, of which 24,000 were allotted
+to Zagreb, the rest going to other parts of the province. It was obvious
+that there would be a great demand for these stamps, and in order to
+check any abuses or clandestine traffic it was decided that they should
+be sold nowhere but at the post offices, also that each purchaser would
+only be allowed to buy a limited quantity. At 8 a.m. the sale began,
+but at seven many hundreds of people were waiting outside the chief
+post office, the post office at the station and another in the Upper Town.
+The face value of the four stamps, added together, was one crown. At
+first they were resold for between 4 and 20 crowns, then the price jumped
+to 30, and by 10 a.m. the 45-heller stamp (of which only 15,000 had been
+printed) was sold out. Collectors were paying 8 or 10 crowns for it, in
+order to complete their sets. At noon the offices were all shut, as the
+rush was considered too dangerous. More than 1000 persons were in
+the great hall at the Head Office and another 2000 were gathered outside.
+Nearly all the windows where the stamps were being sold were broken.
+At the Station Post Office the people began to fight with the sentries.
+The National Guard had to be sent for. At 4 p.m. the post offices had
+no stamps left (and citizens who had been waiting all day to buy an
+ordinary stamp could not be served). At 5 p.m. people who for the first
+time in their lives were taking an interest in philately, wanted 300-500
+crowns from collectors for a whole series. Between 5 and 6 p.m. a stamp
+exchange was held in the entrance hall. Eight hundred to one thousand
+crowns were being demanded for the series. Soldiers were willing to
+give the four stamps in exchange for a pair of boots, others were asking
+for sugar, coffee or petrol. The price which was ultimately established
+was 250 crowns.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Out of the hundreds of available documents it will suffice if I print
+one. It is the report, given in his words, of a Dalmatian, a native of
+Sinj, who having been an emigrant could write in English. "On July
+1915 I came to the Italian front, and on the morrow I went across the
+lines and deserted to the Italians. As soon as I arrived at the station
+of internment I requested the Command to be admitted as a voluntary
+into the Serbian army. This petition of mine was answered by Italian
+authorities in the negative. After the Congress of Rome in 1918 I and
+some of my comrades who had recently applied for admission were
+permitted to join the Yugoslav legion on June 1. I was right away
+sent to the front of the Tyrol, where on August 7 I was wounded in a hard
+bayonet fight. On this occasion I was decorated by the Italian Commander
+for valour. After 45 days of hospital by my own request I was
+sent to the front, where I remained up to the break-up of Austria or until
+we Yugoslav legion were disarmed by Italians and as a reward for our
+participation in the war we were interned as prisoners of war at Casale
+di Altamura in the province of Bari. Four days after my internment
+I succeeded in sliding away, so that on the Christmas Eve I was again in
+Dalmatia.
+<span style="float: right; padding-right: 1.5em;">(Signed) <span class="smcap">Jakov Delonga</span>."</span><br style="clear: both" /></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a>
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"In tra 'l gregge che misero e raro<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">L'asburgese predon t' ha lasciato,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Perche piangi, o fratello croato,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Il figiul che in Italia mori."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+("There among the woebegone where the most contemptible Habsburger
+has abandoned his prey, so that, O my Croat brother, it weeps
+for the dear son who died in Italy.")</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> April 23, 1919.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Cf. <i>La Slavisation de la Dalmatie.</i> Paris, 1917.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> The Italians are very poorly served by some of their advocates.
+For years they persisted in demanding the execution of whatever in the
+Treaty or Pact of London was obnoxious to the Serbs, while they regarded
+as obsolete another clause, respecting the formation of a small independent
+Albania, which was distasteful to themselves, and&mdash;if I rightly understand
+the Italophil Mr. H.&nbsp;E. Goad&mdash;they were justified because, forsooth,
+Bulgaria had entered the War on the other side. To say that the idea of
+this small Albania, with corresponding compensations to the Serbs and
+Greeks, was held out as a bribe to the Bulgars does not seem to me a
+very wise remark. However, "ne croyez pas le p&egrave;re Bonnet," said
+Montesquieu, "lorsqu'il dit du mal de moi, ni moi-m&ecirc;me lorsque je dis
+du mal du p&egrave;re Bonnet, parce que nous nous sommes brouill&eacute;s." Let the
+reader trust in nothing but the facts, and I hope that those which I
+present are not an unfair selection.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> When Supilo, the late Dalmatian leader, heard about the secret
+Treaty, he went to Petrograd and saw Sazonov. The interview is said to
+have been stormy, for the Russian Minister, according to the <i>Primorske
+Novine</i> (April 23, 1919), "had not the most elementary knowledge of
+the Slav nature of Dalmatia, still less of Istria, Triest, Gorica and the rest."
+Mr. Asquith, whom Supilo afterwards visited in London, is said to have
+been no better informed than Sazonov.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> And appearing subsequently in London, as Nikita's Prime Minister,
+was the central figure of a reception given by Lord Sydenham at the
+Savoy. But out of fairness to his lordship I must add that in an hour's
+conversation he impressed me with the fact that he was even less acquainted
+with Plamenac's antecedents than he was with other Montenegrin affairs,
+which he raised on more than one occasion in the House of Lords, endeavouring
+there&mdash;until Lord Curzon overwhelmed him&mdash;to play the
+part that was assumed by Mr. M'Neill in the Commons.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> We shall see that the subsequent history of this officer was less
+laudable.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Cf. <i>Nineteenth Century and After</i>, January 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> This very able priest became Vice-President of the Council of
+Ministers when the first Yugoslav Cabinet was formed. When Cardinal
+Bourne visited Belgrade in the spring of 1919 a Mass was celebrated by
+the Yugoslav Cabinet Minister, the British Cardinal and a French priest
+who was an aviation captain in the army. Monsignor Koro&#353;ec's position
+reminds one that in the early days of Bulgaria's freedom her Premier
+was the Archbishop of Trnovo.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Cf. p. 60, Vol. II.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Cf. <i>The New Europe</i>, March 27, 1919.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> There are in the Banat some ultra-patriotic Magyars, such as the
+man at Antanfalva (Kova&#269;i&#269;a) who, having lost something between his
+house and the post office, insisted on advertising for it in the Buda-Pest
+papers. But the Yugoslav rule was so satisfactory that, two or three
+years after the Armistice, I found in the large Hungarian village of
+Debelyacsa&mdash;where the <i>intelligentsia</i> called the sympathetic Serbian
+notary by his Christian name&mdash;not one of the inhabitants proposed to
+remove to Hungary. No doubt the goodness of the soil had something
+to do with this decision, but, more, the liberal methods of the Serbs. No
+military service was as yet exacted&mdash;all that the Magyars had been asked
+to do was to work for two months in obliterating the ravages of war.
+The priest and the schoolmaster who had come from Hungary before the
+War still exercised their functions, and&mdash;in contrast with what had
+previously been the case&mdash;both the Magyar and the Serbian language
+were taught, the latter from the third class upwards. Altogether there
+was perfect harmony between the Magyars and the Serbs; when I was
+there the only racial question which occupied the Magyar farmers was
+the resolve of their <i>intelligentsia</i> to have, as centre-half in the football
+team, not a Magyar but a more skilful Jewish player.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> The Southern Slavs generally acknowledged that the Foreign Office
+was bound to behave to Italy, one of the Great Powers, with a certain
+deference. They also recognize that the Foreign Office is not actuated by
+malevolence if she treats Belgrade as she did Morocco, when in place of
+the strikingly appropriate and picturesque appointment of Sir Richard
+Burton our Legation there was occupied by one of a series of diplomatic
+automata. After all, these automata, who have spent more or less laborious
+years in the service, have to be deposited somewhere. But if one does
+not demand of the Foreign Office that she should make a rule of sending
+to the Balkans, where the personal factor is so important, such a man as
+the brilliant O'Beirne, who during the War was dispatched too late to
+Bulgaria, yet a moderate level should be maintained&mdash;it has happened
+before now that we have been represented in a Balkan country by a
+Minister who, some time after his arrival, had not read a Treaty dealing
+with those people and of which Great Britain was one of the high contracting
+parties; when taxed with this omission the aforesaid Minister
+hung his head like a guilty schoolboy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> October 13, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> This has been done, but to a much more limited extent, in Hungary
+where several hundred men who distinguished themselves in the European
+War have been granted the Gold Medal for Bravery, which entitles each
+of them to a goodly portion of land. This the recipient may not sell,
+but he need not leave it to his eldest son if a younger one is more interested
+in agriculture. Each medallist, by the way, is authorized to exhibit
+outside his house a notice which informs the world that he possesses this
+most treasured decoration; but perhaps to our eyes the strangest privilege
+the Medal carries with it is the permission to write "Vitez" (which is
+the Hungarian for "brave") in front of the name. Thus if Koranji
+Sandor is decorated he is to call himself henceforward Vitez Koranji
+Sandor, and that is the correct address on an envelope. Not only is the
+honorific awarded to him, but is to be used by all his sons and by their
+sons. We might imagine that a man would shrink from permanently
+calling himself Brave John Smith, especially if he has been very brave,
+but the average Magyar will not feel excessively awkward, since he is
+not altogether repelled by that which is garish.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> The Czechs believe that Agrarian Reform should be the work of a
+generation. They are beginning on the very large estates, those which
+run to more than 50,000 hectares, and in calculating the price to be paid,
+40 per cent. is deducted for the State on properties of this size. On those
+of between 20,000 and 50,000 hectares 30 per cent. is deducted, and so
+on down to the 5 per cent., which is appropriated from the holdings of
+from 1000 to 2000 hectares. It is also the Government's intention in
+Czecho-Slovakia to take in hand such properties as are badly administered,
+and, by a wise proviso, when a denunciation arrives to the effect, for
+example, that the proprietor is not using manure and that thus the State
+is suffering injury, a dozen men, belonging to the various political parties,
+go down to investigate. If they find that the accusation is not justified and
+that the place is satisfactorily worked, then the man who made the charge
+is obliged to pay the examining committee's expenses.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> The trouble arose at the end of May when a number of citizens of
+&#352;ibenik, men and women, donned the American colours as a compliment
+to the sailors of the U.S. warship <i>Maddalena</i>, who had taken to wearing
+those of Yugoslavia. The &#352;ibenik ladies and men, relying perhaps on
+the words of Admiral Millo with regard to Allied colours, never dreamed
+that any objection would be made. But suddenly one evening everybody
+with these colours was attacked by Italian soldiers, who tore them off
+and explained that it was done by the General's order. Italian officers
+did not interfere while ladies were being very roughly handled. A certain
+Jakovljevi&#263;, a shopkeeper, who had sold an American flag, was imprisoned.
+On the same evening a number of prominent citizens were summoned
+before the town commandant, Colonel Cappone, who spoke as follows:
+"A Croat, a Croat has dared to display a flag before an ardito!" [An
+American flag.] "This fool! instead of giving him a black eye, the
+ardito pulled off his flag. This is Italy! Mind you don't go to the
+<i>Maddalena</i> to-morrow! Whatever it costs me, I shall prevent it! You
+are the leaders who will be responsible for anything that happens to-morrow."
+[This was the eve of the Italian national celebration of June 1.]
+"Our arditi are blood-thirsty; do not be surprised if some lady of
+yours receives a black eye.... We are the masters here! This is
+Italy! This is Italy! We have won the War, we have spent milliards
+and sacrificed millions of soldiers." On this Mr. Mi&#353;e Ivanovi&#263; remarked:
+"I beg your pardon, but the Paris Conference has not yet decided the
+fate of these territories." And the Colonel replied, "It has been decided!
+But even if we had to leave, remember that on taking down our flag we
+shall destroy everything, with 5000 machine guns, 2000 guns and 40,000
+men! Good night, gentlemen." This declaration made by the town
+commandant, presumably a responsible officer, was testified by the
+signature of all those who were present.... When, in 1921, the Italians
+were leaving &#352;ibenik they destroyed a large number of young trees in the
+park and elsewhere. The Venetians, in the Middle Ages, had cut down
+millions of Dalmatian trees, but always with a utilitarian purpose.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> In view of what the census said with regard to this place it is superfluous
+to add that when an Italian officer in my hearing asked one who
+was stationed there if there was any social life, the other answered:
+"None at all; the whole population is Slav." I find that <i>Modern Italy</i>
+(published in London) quoted with approval the following telegram
+which appeared, it said, in the <i>Tempo</i> of May 9: "A remarkably enthusiastic
+celebration took place at Obrovazzo. Several thousands, including
+representatives of the neighbouring villages, formed a procession and
+marched through the town. In the principal piazza, the President of
+the National party, Bertuzzi, delivered a stirring speech, which was
+enthusiastically applauded."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> It is customary for Serbian officers to wear but one decoration, the
+highest among those to which they are entitled. To illustrate this
+Serbian modesty regarding honorifics, I might mention that one evening
+at the house of a Belgrade lawyer I heard his wife, a Scotswoman, to
+whom he had been married for more than a year, ascertain that he had
+won the Obili&#263; medal for bravery and several other decorations which&mdash;and
+his case was typical&mdash;he had not troubled to procure.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> June 24, 1919.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> May 15, 1919.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Mr. Leiper in the <i>Morning Post</i> (June 23, 1920) scouts the idea of
+these malcontents being the supporters of Nikita, who "were all laid by
+the heels or driven out of the country long ago&mdash;largely by the inhabitants
+themselves." He observes that the land is one land with Serbian soil&mdash;its
+frontiers are merely the artificial imposition of kings and policies.
+The nations, he points out, are not two but one&mdash;one in blood, in temperament,
+in habits, in tradition, in language; round the fireside they tell
+their children the same stories, sing them the same songs: the greatest
+poem in Serbian literature, as all the world knows, was written by a
+Prince-Bishop of Montenegro. Since the day when the Serbian State
+came into existence it has been, he says, the constant, burning desire of
+the Montenegrins to be joined to it. We may well rub our eyes at a letter
+in the same newspaper from Lord Sydenham, who makes the perfectly
+inane remark that this constant, burning desire was never probable.
+"Montenegro already <i>is</i> Serbia," says Mr. Leiper, "and Serbia Montenegro,
+in every way except verbally." But Lord Sydenham has set himself
+up as a stern critic of the Serbs in Montenegro; therefore he cannot
+countenance the Leiper articles, which give him "pain and surprise."
+Is he surprised that Mr. Leiper, a shrewd Scottish traveller, who is acquainted
+with the language, should disagree with him? "The great
+mass of the people," says Mr. Leiper, "are as firm as a rock in their
+determination that Nicholas shall never return." Listen to Lord Sydenham:
+"I am afraid," says he, "that your correspondent has been
+misled by the raging, tearing Serbian propaganda with which I am
+familiar." And he quotes for our benefit an unnamed correspondent of
+his in Montenegro who says that the people there are terrified of speaking.
+It is much to be desired that a little of this terror might invade a gentleman
+who plunges headlong into matters which he does not understand.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Cf. <i>Morning Post</i>, November 17, 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> A most vivid account of this affair was contributed to the <i>Chicago
+Tribune</i> (July 13, 1919) by its correspondent, Thomas Stewart Ryan,
+one of the two neutral eye-witnesses. He came to the conclusion that
+as Italy was an interested party and was exasperated by the long delay in
+the decision, an outbreak even more violent might occur unless her forces
+were brought down to the level of the other Allies. In alliance with the
+city rabble, the Giovani Fiumani, Italian soldiers attacked the French:
+"I can state emphatically," says Mr. Ryan, "that the French guards
+did nothing whatever to provoke the assault, some details of which would
+blot the escutcheon of most savage tribes. I saw soldiers of France killed,
+after surrender, by their supposed Allies.... I could scarcely believe
+my ears when Italian officers rapped out the order to load. But they
+seemed to remember that Frenchmen can fight." However, he also saw
+an Italian officer who "prevented this murder and held back the civilians
+who were trying to reach their victim. I must record it to the credit of
+this officer that his was the only Italian voice to defend the game little
+soldier. 'A hundred against one! Shame on you, soldiers of Italy!' I
+wish I knew this officer's name." At another part of the harbour, "A
+British naval officer, fearing that the wounded Frenchman would be
+stabbed inside the court to which he was dragged, followed the body and
+defied the captain of carabinieri, who ordered him to leave." And at the
+close "I was no longer alone with my friend as a neutral eye-witness.
+The British Admiral Sinclair appeared, causing much perturbation to
+the Italian officers, who though some of them had just taken part in
+the shambles, were already glib with excuses. 'The British Admiral
+wants to know' was enough to bring the Italian officer running and
+bowing, with 'I beg of you....' 'We are willing to explain all....'
+American naval officers of the destroyer <i>Talbot</i> were also among this
+post-mortem crowd. In a French motor bearing two Italian officers
+who stood up to ward off possible shots, came a French captain. He was
+of that calm, splendid type that makes you think of the Chevalier Bayard,
+a knightly figure. Quietly he moved among his dead. Not by the
+flicker of an eyelid did he give token of what was working deep down in
+that French heart of his. I heard an Italian officer tell him that the
+French had started the most regrettable affair by firing on the Italian
+ships. The officer spoke this falsehood under the glazed stare of the
+French dead and the protesting gaze of the wounded. The French captain
+nodded his head, remarked, 'Oh yes! of course. Now we must only
+pick up the wounded,' and, with all the gentleness of a mother beside her
+child's sick-bed...." A very good account of this shocking episode
+is contained in <i>A Political Escapade: The Story of Fiume and d'Annunzio</i>,
+by J.&nbsp;N. Macdonald, O.S.B. (London, 1921). His narrative is extremely
+well documented&mdash;he appears to have been a member of the British
+Mission. "It is incomprehensible," says he, "how officers and men
+could attack the very post that they had been sent to defend. Moreover,
+they were over 100 strong and fully armed, whereas the French garrison
+was small and had no intention of putting up a defence." One of the
+lesser outrages described by Father Macdonald, since it was not attended
+with fatal results, was that which happened to Captain Gaillard, who
+from his window saw an Italian lieutenant shoot and kill with his revolver
+an unarmed Annamese. The captain cried out with rage, and when his
+room was entered by fifteen men carrying rifles with fixed bayonets and
+they ordered him to go with them, Madame Gaillard tried to intervene
+and received a blow on the arm dealt with the butt end of a rifle. At
+this juncture an Italian officer appeared and roughly told Gaillard to come
+without further delay. A mob of civilians and soldiers who were outside
+greeted Gaillard with a shower of blows, and while they went along the
+street, the officer escorting him kept up a volley of abuse against France
+and England. Very fortunately for Gaillard he was brought into the
+presence of an Italian officer to whom he was personally known. This
+gentleman, looking very uneasy, refused to give the name of his brother-officer,
+but caused the Frenchman to be released.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Cf. <i>The Balkan Peninsula</i> (English translation). London, 1887.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="VII" id="VII"></a>VII<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></h2>
+
+<h3>FURTHER MONTHS OF TRIAL</h3>
+
+<p class="subtitle"><span class="smcap">D'Annunzio spreads himself&mdash;The wave of Italian Imperialism&mdash;Their
+wish for Rieka, dead or alive&mdash;Fruitless efforts of
+Italy's allies&mdash;Some of Rieka's scandals&mdash;Progress of the
+Yugoslav idea&mdash;Despite the new phenomenon of Communism&mdash;The
+rise and fall of Communism in Yugoslavia&mdash;Other lions
+in the path&mdash;The nadir of Devine and Nikita&mdash;A General&mdash;Two
+comic pro-Italians in our midst&mdash;The belated Treaty of
+Rapallo&mdash;Its probable fruits&mdash;New forces in the first Yugoslav
+Parliament</span>&mdash;(<i>a</i>) <span class="smcap">Markovi&#263;, the Communist</span>&mdash;(<i>b</i>) <span class="smcap">Radi&#263;,
+the much-discussed&mdash;The Serbs and the Croats&mdash;The sad case
+of Pribi&#263;evi&#269;&mdash;Lessons of the Montenegrin Elections&mdash;Which
+one gentleman refuses to take&mdash;Medi&aelig;val doings at Rieka&mdash;The
+stricken town&mdash;Hopes in the Little Entente</span>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">D'ANNUNZIO SPREADS HIMSELF</p>
+
+<p>When the Serbian army came, during the Balkan
+War, into the historic town of Prilep a certain soldier sent
+his family an interesting letter, which was found a few
+years afterwards at Ni&#353; and printed in a book. One
+passage tells about a conversation as to a disputed point
+of medi&aelig;val history between the soldier and a chance
+acquaintance. "Brother," said the Serb, "whose is this
+town?" And the man of Prilep recognized at once that
+his catechist was not referring to the actual possessor but
+to Marko of the legendary exploits. When the same
+question was asked of Gabriele d'Annunzio he said that
+Rieka was Italian then and for ever, and that he who
+proclaimed its annexation to Italy was a mutilated war-combatant.
+Most of the citizens, as time went on, began
+to think that they would sooner hear about Rieka's
+annexation to another land, which was the work of Nature.
+Those who did not entertain this view were the salaried<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
+assistants of d'Annunzio and the speculators who had
+bought up millions of crowns in the hope that Italy, as
+mistress of Rieka, would change them into lire, even if
+she did not give so good a rate as at Triest. The poet
+addressed himself to the France of Victor Hugo, the
+England of Milton, and the America of Lincoln, but not
+to the business men of Rieka, who would have told him
+that 70 per cent. of the property, both movable and
+immovable, was Yugoslav, while 10 <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'per cent'">per cent.</ins> was Italian
+and the rest in the hands of foreigners. Not waiting to
+listen to such details, d'Annunzio sailed, with a thousand
+men, to Zadar, had a conference with Admiral Millo, and
+won him over. Whether he would have persuaded
+Victor Hugo, Milton or Abraham Lincoln, we must gravely
+doubt. "I am not bound to win," says Lincoln, whom we
+may take as the spokesman of the trio, "but I am bound
+to be true. I am not bound to succeed, but I am bound
+to live up to what light I have. I must stand with anybody
+that stands right; stand with him while he is right,
+and part with him when he goes wrong." In view of the
+wilful trespass committed by Italians on the property
+and rights of the Yugoslavs and the oft-repeated
+guarantees of protection given to the Slavs by the
+American Government against such invasion, it is passing
+strange that d'Annunzio should have appealed to
+Abraham Lincoln of all people. As for Admiral Millo,
+he telegraphed to Rome that he had thrown in his
+fortunes with those of d'Annunzio, and he made to the
+populace a very fiery speech. It is not known whether
+he communicated with the France of Clemenceau, the
+England of Lloyd George and the America of Wilson,
+whose representative he apparently continued to be for
+the rest of Dalmatia, while relinquishing that post with
+regard to Zadar, his residence.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE WAVE OF ITALIAN IMPERIALISM</p>
+
+<p>If Admiral Millo's rebellion had been published in
+the press of November 16th, it is most likely that 250,
+instead of 160, Socialists would have been successful at
+the General Election&mdash;an election which Signor Nitti,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+that very able parliamentarian, had brought about for
+the purpose, amongst other things, of testing the forces
+and popularity of the Nationalist party. The old Chamber
+had&mdash;voicing the wishes of the people&mdash;voted for
+the open annexation of Rieka, without war or violence;
+the Nationalists, in order to gain their ends, would
+seemingly have stopped at nothing. Military adventures,
+the breaking of alliances, agrarian and industrial upheaval&mdash;it
+was all the same to them. They scoffed at the
+common sense of the imperturbable Nitti when he said
+that the Italians, like their Roman ancestors, must return
+to the plough. Furiously they harped upon the facts
+that bread was dearer now, that coal was nearly unprocurable.
+And Giolitti, who in 1915 had strenuously
+tried to keep the country neutral, said in a great speech
+before this 1919 election that the War had been waged
+between England and Germany for the supremacy of the
+survivor and that Italy should never have participated.
+He enlarged upon the fearful sufferings of his countrymen,
+and he compared the gains of Italy with those of her
+Allies. Nor was he deterred when Signor Salandra, the
+former Premier, called him Italy's evil spirit who, devoid
+of any patriotism, would have sold the Fatherland to the
+Central Powers for a mess of pottage. Giolitti, on whom
+300 deputies had left their cards in the tragic hours before
+the declaration of war, had good reason to know that
+even if Giolittism had melted away, the House had
+secretly remained Giolittian.</p>
+
+<p>A new electoral system was introduced, whereby the
+people voted for programmes and parties rather than
+directly for individual candidates. This, it was hoped,
+would render corruption more difficult by enclosing the
+individual within the framework of the list, and it was
+also hoped that there would be less violence than usual.
+As a matter of fact there probably was a diminution with
+respect to these two practices, but only because of the
+large number of abstentions&mdash;merely 29 per cent. voted in
+Rome, 38 per cent. in Naples, and in Turin scarcely more.
+The people were tired of the excessive complexity and
+dissimulation of Italian politics. There was a good deal
+of violence&mdash;in Milan, Florence, Bologna and Sicily the
+riots were sometimes fatal&mdash;and with such an electorate,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
+more extensive than heretofore, so that symbols had
+often to be used instead of the printed word, it was to be
+expected that there would not be an atmosphere of even
+relatively calm discussion. At Naples 132 candidates
+struggled for eleven seats&mdash;their meetings were indescribable.
+And it may be thought that in such conditions
+the victorious parties would not necessarily
+reflect the wishes of the country. The Nationalists were
+dispersed, the Giolittians were routed&mdash;the Socialists
+increased from 40 to 156, and the Catholics from 30 to 101.
+Gabriele d'Annunzio had been the Socialists' chief elector.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THEIR WISH FOR RIEKA, DEAD OR ALIVE</p>
+
+<p>There was now a fair hope that the Government would
+be in a position to solve the Adriatic problem. The
+Italian delegates in Paris had suggested that, in the
+independent buffer State, Rieka should have a separate
+municipal status, and that a narrow strip of land should
+join the buffer State to Italy. On December 9, a memorandum
+was signed by the representatives of Great Britain
+and America, which was the best compromise which anyone
+had yet proposed. The strip was dismissed as being
+"counter to every known consideration of geography,
+economics and territorial convenience." [Nevertheless
+this very dangerous expedient of the strip, after having
+been thus roundly rejected by the Allies, formed a part
+of the Treaty of Rapallo in November 1920&mdash;the Yugoslavs
+had most generously given way rather than leave this
+exasperating Adriatic problem still unsolved.] Rieka
+with her environment was to be a <i>corpus separatum</i>&mdash;and
+this was the chief point which made the proposals inacceptable
+to Italy. That Socialist group which is
+represented by the <i>Avanti</i> seemed to be the only one
+whose attitude was not intransigeant. The question of
+Rieka, it argued, was not isolated, but should be considered
+as one of the numerous questions of Italian foreign
+politics. It laughed at those who every moment cry "Our
+Fiume," because there are in the town many people who
+speak Italian. Other groups of Socialists had altered very
+much from the day when the three delegates&mdash;Labriola,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+Raimundo and Cappa&mdash;spoke of the Adriatic at the
+Congress which Kerensky summoned to Petrograd.
+Labriola was considered the most arrogant and chauvinist
+of the trio, but not even he demanded Rieka&mdash;there was
+no question of it at the time. Still less did he dream of
+Zadar or &#352;ibenik; what he pleaded for was Triest, Istria
+and an island.... In December 1919 some Italian
+Socialist papers were printing reports on the economic
+life of Rieka, which was in a disastrous condition. But
+the great majority of Italians were so bent upon securing
+Rieka that they did not seem to care if by that time she
+were dead. And they threw a little dust into their eyes,
+if not into the eyes of the Entente, by declaring that if they
+did not annex Rieka that unhappy, faithful town would
+annex them. The self-appointed Consiglio Nazionale
+Italiano of Rieka was, however, at this time less preoccupied
+with the Madre Patria than with her own very
+troublesome affairs; she had no leisure to organize those
+patriotic deputations to Rome, which sailed so frequently
+across the Adriatic and which, as was revealed by Signor
+Nitti's organ <i>Il Tempo</i>,<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> were too often composed of
+speculators who liked to receive in Italy the sum of
+60 centesimi for an unstamped Austrian paper crown
+that was barely worth ten. The disillusioned C.N.I.
+would have given a good many lire to be rid of d'Annunzio;
+the citizens were invited to vote on the following
+question: "Is it desirable to accept the proposal of
+the Italian Government, declared acceptable by the
+C.N.I. at its meeting of December 15, which absolves
+Gabriele d'Annunzio and his legionaries from their oath
+to hold Rieka until its annexation has been decreed and
+effected?" On December 21, in the Chamber, Signor
+Nitti announced that more than half the citizens had
+voted and that four-fifths of them were in favour of the
+suggestion of the C.N.I. But d'Annunzio, whose adherents
+by no means facilitated the plebiscite, proclaimed
+it null and void. Yet, after all, Italy had likewise, on
+every occasion when the Yugoslavs suggested a plebiscite
+under impartial control, refused to sanction it.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="section">FRUITLESS EFFORTS OF ITALY'S ALLIES</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly a ray of light shone through the
+clouds. The ever-cheerful Signor Nitti, after a conference
+with Lloyd George and Clemenceau&mdash;no Yugoslav
+being present, whereas Signor Nitti was both pleader and
+judge&mdash;was authorized to say that the December memorandum
+had been shelved. Terms more favourable to
+Italy were substituted and the Yugoslav Government
+were told they must accept them. One of these terms
+was to modify the Wilson line in Istria, ostensibly for
+the protection of Triest and in reality to dominate the
+railway line Rieka-St. Peter-Ljubljana; another of
+the terms was to present Italy with that narrow corridor
+which in December the Allies had so peremptorily disallowed.
+No wonder the American Ambassador in
+France gave his warning. "You are going," he said,
+"much too far and much too quickly. President Wilson
+cannot keep pace with you." The French Government
+was passing through a period of change, and these new
+proposals, as was underlined in the <i>Temps</i>,<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> emanated
+from London. Mr. Lloyd George, who may have wished
+for Signor Nitti's aid in his offensive against France in
+the Russian and Turkish questions, was this time very
+badly served by his intuition. The Yugoslavs were
+ordered to accept the new proposals or to submit to the
+application of the Treaty of London, that secret and
+abandoned instrument which&mdash;to mention only one of
+the objections against it&mdash;provided for complete Yugoslav
+sovereignty over Rieka, a solution that, in view of Italy's
+inflamed public opinion, was for the time being impracticable.
+And while the Yugoslavs were told that
+Rieka would, under the Treaty of London, fall to them,
+no details were given as to how d'Annunzio was to be
+removed. "Nous sommes dans l'incoh&eacute;rence," as
+Clemenceau used to say of the political condition of
+France before the war. Seeing that the Italian Government
+and the C.N.I. had shown themselves so powerless,
+were France and England going to turn the poet out?
+But Mr. Lloyd George was more fortunate than Disraeli,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>whose error in the question of Bosnia and Herzegovina
+had had such dire results; on February 13, a very firm
+note was issued by President Wilson, which compelled
+France and Great Britain to withdraw from the position
+they had taken up. Wilson would have nothing to do
+with the notorious corridor, though Clemenceau had said
+on January 13, to the Yugoslav delegates: "Si nous
+n'avions pas fait cette concession, nous n'avions pas eu
+le reste." "The American Government," said Wilson,
+"feels that it cannot sacrifice the principle for which it
+entered the war to gratify the improper ambition of one
+of its associates, Italy, to purchase a temporary appearance
+of calm in the Adriatic at the price of a future world
+conflagration." The rejoinder of the French and British
+Premiers was a trifle lame, and when they ventured to
+add that they could not believe that it was the purpose
+of the American people, as the President threatened, to
+retire from the treaty with Germany and the agreement
+of June 28, 1919, with France unless his point of view was
+adopted in this particular case, which, in their opinion,
+had "the appearance of being so inadequate," they were
+not caring to remember that while their own countries and
+Italy were suffering from a lack of food-stuffs and provisions
+were being imported at a disastrous rate of
+exchange from the United States, the products of Yugoslavia,
+such as meat and meal, could not be obtained
+because Rieka, which ought surely to serve its hinterland,
+was at that moment not available, owing to
+d'Annunzio. At the same time the President did not go
+to the opposite extreme of simply allocating the port to
+Yugoslavia, which the application of the Treaty of
+London would involve. He preferred to act on the
+principle that the differences between Italy and the
+Yugoslavs were inconsiderable, especially as compared
+with the magnitude of their common interests. And
+direct negotiations between the two parties were to be
+recommended, with the proviso that no use be made of
+France and Great Britain's immoral suggestion that an
+agreement be reached on "the basis of compensation
+elsewhere at the expense of nationals of a third Power."
+It had indeed been proposed that the Yugoslavs should
+be bribed by concessions in Albania, but this idea was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
+very explicitly rejected and on more than one occasion
+by the Yugoslav delegates in Paris.</p>
+
+<p>While, in the following months, the Yugoslavs and
+the Italians negotiated, the task of their delegates was
+impeded by the occasional Cabinet crises in Belgrade
+and in Rome. It was made no easier by those Italians
+who clamorously objected to the remark of Clemenceau,
+when he said that both Yugoslavs and Italians had been
+compelled to fight in Austria's army. The <i>Corriere
+d'Italia</i> told him that he displayed the zeal of a corporal
+to defend the Yugoslavs. After alluding to his "historical
+inexactitudes," it reminded him of the Italians
+who were slain at Reims and the Chemin des Dames,
+but as usual omitted to speak of the French soldiers who
+fell in Italy. And, while the negotiations were being
+carried on, Gabriele d'Annunzio clung to his town. The
+compromise of a mixed administration seemed to have
+small chance of being realized. It had been proposed by
+that Inter-Allied Commission which was set up to investigate
+the circumstances of the French massacre; and
+the Italian delegate, General di Robilant, not only said
+in his report<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> to the Senate that this compromise was
+most favourable for Italian aspirations but he is alleged
+also to have included some very drastic criticism of the
+actions of the high military authorities, whom he charged
+with unconstitutional interference. Nevertheless neither
+the poet nor the Premier were as yet in a tractable
+mood with regard to the Rieka problem. Signor Nitti,
+parading his bonhomie, championed the cause in a more
+statesmanlike fashion; he did not, like d'Annunzio,
+evoke the world's ridicule by his footlight attitudes and
+those of his faithful supporters who, when his "Admiral"
+Rizzo abandoned him, when Giorati his confidant withdrew,
+when even Millo advised moderation, took certain
+piratical steps in order to keep the garrison supplied with
+food,<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> and composed an anthem which on ceremonial
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>occasions was chanted in the poet's honour. But when
+Signor Nitti observed, with the utmost affability, that
+Rieka had, after the fall of the Crown of St. Stephen,
+become mistress of her own fate and as such, regardless
+of the Treaty of London, asked for inclusion in Italy,
+he, the Prime Minister, was vying in recklessness with
+d'Annunzio. The prevailing sentiment both in Triest
+and Rieka, said the <i>Times</i>,<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> was that both these towns
+should become free ports in order to serve their hinterlands,
+which are not Italian. "Italy is neglecting Triest
+in favour of Venice," says the dispatch. In Rieka,
+where the situation was even worse, "an honest plebiscite,
+even if confined to the Italian part of the city, would give
+a startling result. The Italians of Rieka are convinced
+that their existence depends on good relations with the
+Yugoslavs. They wish the town and port to be independent
+under the sovereignty of the League of Nations.
+This I have recently been told by a large number of
+Italians in Rieka who are obliged, in public, to support
+d'Annunzio." Signor Nitti must have been aware that
+the voice of the C.N.I. was very far from being the
+voice of Rieka. The C.N.I. had reasons of their own
+for wishing to postpone the day when their arbitrary
+powers would come to an end and a legal Government,
+whether that of the League of Nations or of the people's
+will or of Italy or of Yugoslavia, be established.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">SOME OF RIEKA'S SCANDALS</p>
+
+<p>Owing to the complaints of innumerable citizens the
+C.N.I. had nominated a Commission to inquire into the
+pillage of the former Austrian stores at Rieka&mdash;this town,
+as we have mentioned, had been the base for the Albanian
+army&mdash;and the findings of that Commission displayed
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>the culpability of the most prominent members of the
+C.N.I. This document was for a long time unknown
+to the general public, but was afterwards published in
+Italy by Signor Riccardo Zanella, himself an Italian
+and an ex-deputy and ex-mayor of Rieka. There was,
+by the way, an article in the Triest paper, <i>Il Lavoratore</i>,
+at the beginning of September 1920, wherein one Tercilio
+Borghese, a former member of d'Annunzio's army,
+confesses that on June 21, he was ordered by d'Annunzio,
+as also by Colonel Sani and Captain Baldassari, to get
+Signor Zanella in some way out of the world. Hinko
+Camero and Angelo Marzi&#263;, his fellow-workers, had
+likewise to be removed; and for this purpose Borghese
+says that the Colonel provided him with a revolver.
+He was also to try to seize any compromising documents.
+But he was forced by his conscience to reveal everything
+to Zanella.... Now this confession may be true or
+false, but the Triest "fascisti" (Nationalists) believed in
+it, for they issued a placard on which they called Borghese
+a traitor and threatened him with death. "He who
+after November 1918 returns to the martyred town,"
+writes Signor Zanella, "is simply stupefied in beholding
+that those personages who now strut on the political
+scene, burning with the most ardent Italian patriotism,
+are the same who until the eve of Vittorio Veneto were
+the most unbending, the most eloquent and the most
+devoted partisans and servants of the reactionary Magyar
+r&eacute;gime." And around them a number of more or less
+questionable persons were assembled, whose conduct with
+regard to the disposal of the Austrian stores has now
+been so severely censured. That organization which,
+dependent on the C.N.I., was supposed to administer
+the stores, was known as the Adriatic Commission. "We
+all knew," said the Commission of inquiry, "that the
+eyes of the whole world were gazing at our little town."
+It was, therefore, very desirable that nothing irregular
+should be done; whereas the judges give a most unfavourable
+verdict. Nobody, they say, would rejoice more
+than themselves if their conclusions should be shown to
+be completely or partly erroneous, for they are all of
+them penetrated with love for the fatherland Italy.
+But they relate, with chapter and verse, a large number<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+of peculiar transactions which show that the goods were
+very improperly and very hastily auctioned, and that
+those who reaped the benefit were nearly always the
+same people. To give one instance, some of the wine,
+said to have been damaged, was sold at 260 crowns the
+thousand litres, while undamaged wine brought 320
+crowns, and the firm of Riboli, the only one which appeared
+at the so-called auction, was only asked to pay 30 crowns.
+Thus a considerable number of people in Rieka were
+anxious that the town should not come under any
+Government which might punish the culprits or make
+them disgorge. And Nitti and d'Annunzio agreed with
+these interested parties in opposing a solution other
+than the overlordship of Italy. "The Yugoslavs should
+understand," said the amiable Premier, "that Italy has
+no intention of acting in a manner distasteful to them,
+but is struggling for a national ideal." And meantime
+what of the conditions in the poor distracted town?
+"D'Annunzio," says an Italian paper, "is no longer
+the master of Rieka. He has become the prisoner of
+his own troops.... While he amuses himself and
+organizes the worst orgies, his troops quarrel in the
+streets and discharge their weapons.... A great many
+of them have their mistresses in the hospital, where they
+make themselves at home. When the doctors, after
+some time, protested, the arditi, with bombs in their
+hands, threatened to blow up the hospital if they were
+not allowed to enter it." On the other hand the pale,
+weary-looking poet succeeded in impressing on a special
+correspondent of the <i>Morning Post</i> that he was "master
+of his job." He told this gentleman&mdash;and was apparently
+believed&mdash;that with the consent and approval of the
+C.N.I. he had had the whole place mined, city and
+harbour, and was prepared to blow it up at a moment's
+notice. The means by which d'Annunzio, according to
+his interviewer, worked on those who were depressed
+with gazing at the empty shops, the silent warehouses,
+the grass-grown wharves, so that the overwhelming
+majority of the town supported him, was by simply
+making to them an eloquent speech. D'Annunzio would
+indeed be the master of his job if with some rounded
+periods in Italian he could cause the very numerous<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+hostile business men to forget so blissfully that they
+were men of business. Under his dispensation the town
+is said to have been turned into a place of debauchery.
+Accusations were brought against his sexual code, and
+with regard to men of commerce: "those who are not
+partisans of d'Annunzio are expelled, and their establishments
+handed over to friends of the ruling power....
+Woe to him who dares to condemn the transactions of
+the poet's adherents. There and then he is pronounced
+to be a Yugoslav, is placed under surveillance and is
+persecuted." These Italian critics of the poet do not
+in the least exaggerate. One instance of his conduct
+towards a British firm will be sufficient. The "Anglo-Near
+East Trading Company" shipped sixty-seven cases
+(5292 pairs) of boots to private traders in Belgrade, and
+on the way they reached Rieka just before d'Annunzio.
+In March 1920 they were still detained there, and on the
+13th of that month a certain Alcesde di Ambris, who
+described himself as the Chief of the Cabinet, wrote a
+letter saying that the boots were requisitioned, and that
+they would be paid for within thirty days at a price
+fixed on March 5 by experts of the local Chamber of
+Commerce. The company was offered forty lire a pair,
+but they declined to accept so inadequate a sum. Se&ntilde;or
+Meynia, the Spanish Consul, who was also representing
+Great Britain, attempted in various ways to help the
+firm; he was finally told by an officer that the "exceptional
+situation of Rieka compels the Authority to
+suspend the exportation or transport of such goods as
+are thoroughly needed here." And the Consul could do
+no more than protest. One might presume, from this
+officer's reply, that d'Annunzio required the boots for
+his army. As a matter of fact, they were simply sold
+to a couple of dealers, one Levy of Triest and Mail&auml;nder
+of Rieka. It is alleged that the prices paid by these
+receivers of stolen property was a good deal higher than
+forty lire. When Signor di Ambris travelled to Rome
+in the merry month of June and enjoyed a consultation
+with the Prime Minister, who by this time was Signor
+Giolitti, it was not in order to explain any such transactions
+as that one of the boots, but for the purpose, we
+are told, of offering the services of d'Annunzio and his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
+legionaries in Albania. The regular Italian army was
+just then being roughly handled by the natives....
+It may be that Signor di Ambris wanted guarantees
+that if the d'Annunzian troops were to come to the
+rescue, they would not suffer the fate of the Yugoslavs
+who in the Great War had managed to desert to Italy,
+had valiantly fought and won many decorations and&mdash;after
+the War&mdash;been ignominiously interned. And they
+had given no grounds for charges of financial frailty.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">PROGRESS OF THE YUGOSLAV IDEA</p>
+
+<p>The months go by and Yugoslavia still survives. At
+the post-office of a large village in Syrmia, not far from
+Djakovo, where Bishop Strossmayer laboured during
+fifty-five years for the union of the Southern Slavs which
+he was destined not to see, a bulky farmer told me that
+in his opinion Yugoslavia, created in 1918, was now in
+1920 "kaput." He deduced this from the fact that a
+telegram used to travel much more expeditiously in
+Austrian days; but he did not remember that the Yugoslavs,
+in the Serbian and in the Austro-Hungarian armies,
+had suffered enormous losses in the War, and that while
+French, Dutch and Swiss doctors have been obtained by
+the Belgrade Government, one cannot use telegraphists
+who are ignorant of the language. An excellent province
+in which Yugoslavia's solidity can be studied is Bosnia.
+At the outbreak of the War the Moslems and Croats
+were not imbued with the Yugoslav idea; it seemed
+to them that the Serbs, one of whom had slain the Archduke,
+were traitors to Southern Slavdom. During the
+War the Croats and Moslems were taught by their Slav
+officers to be good nationalists and were given frequent
+lessons in the art of going over to the enemy. After
+the Armistice one did not see every Serb, Croat and
+Moslem in Bosnia forthwith forgetting all the evil of the
+past. Among the less enlightened certain private acts
+of vengeance had to be performed; but these were not
+as numerous as one might have expected. And very
+soon the population of Bosnia came to be interested far
+less in the old religious differences&mdash;the two deputies
+Dr. D&#382;amonia and Professor Stanojevi&#263; smilingly remembered<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+the day when, as schoolboys at Sarajevo,
+they had been persuaded by the Austrians to pull out
+each other's hair for the reason that one was a Croat
+and one was a Serb&mdash;and now it was the engrossing subject
+of Agrarian Reform which claimed the attention
+of Catholic, Orthodox and Moslem. This is not a religious
+question, for while the landlords are mostly Muhammedan
+begs about half the peasants are of the same religion;
+and the negotiations have been marked by a notable
+absence of passion. Most of the begs acknowledge that
+the old r&eacute;gime was unprofitable, for with the peasant
+paying one-third to one-fifth of his production to the
+landlord the land only yielded, as compared with the
+sandy districts of East Prussia, in the proportion of five
+to twenty-two. Under the new order of things, with the
+State in support of the "usurping" peasant&mdash;so that
+there are said to be in Bosnia about a thousand peasants
+who are millionaires (in crowns)&mdash;there is no longer any
+dispute with regard to the "kmet" land, where the
+peasants with hereditary rights have become the owners;
+and with regard to the "begluk," which the beg used
+to let to anyone he pleased, it is only a question as to
+the degree of compensation. Thus, it is not among the
+landowners and the peasants that one must look in
+searching for an anti-national party. Bosnia contains
+various iron works and coal mines, where profession is
+made of Communism. But when the Prince-Regent was
+about to come to pay his first official visit in 1920 to
+Sarajevo the Governor received a communication from
+the Communists of Zenica, which is on the railway line.
+They asked for permission to salute "our Prince" as
+he came past; and a deputation of these Communists,
+who are very like their colleagues in other parts of Yugoslavia,
+duly appeared and took part in a ceremony at
+the station.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">DESPITE THE NEW PHENOMENON OF COMMUNISM</p>
+
+<p>Just as innocuous&mdash;whatever the enemies of Yugoslavia
+may say&mdash;are the Communists in the old kingdom
+of Serbia. Perhaps in the whole State of Yugoslavia
+they number 50,000 in a population of about 12,500,000.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+But they are so well organized that in the municipal
+elections of 1920 they were victorious in most of the
+towns. In Belgrade they secured 3600 votes, as compared
+with 3200 for the Radicals, 2800 for the Democrats&mdash;both
+of whom were not only badly organized but very
+slack&mdash;and 605 for the Republicans. However, the
+Communists refused to swear the requisite oath, and in
+consequence were not permitted to take office, the Radicals
+and Democrats forming a union to carry on. It was
+agreed to have a new election and the other parties,
+being now awakened, determined that the Communists
+should not again top the poll. But in the provincial
+towns they have not by any means shown themselves a
+disintegrating influence. At Ni&#353;, for example, they conducted
+the municipal affairs quite satisfactorily, while at
+&#268;uprija they perceived that it would be impossible to
+put into effect their entire programme, and so, after
+fourteen days, they resigned.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE RISE AND FALL OF COMMUNISM IN <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'YUGLOSLAVIA'">YUGOSLAVIA</ins></p>
+
+<p>... As for the Communists in the Skup&#353;tina, it
+may be argued that though this party of over fifty members
+has ceased to exist we should have said not simply that
+they are innocuous but that they have been rendered so.
+They were in principle against any State which violated
+their somewhat hazy ideas on the subject of Capital:
+while professing to aim at the holding of wealth in common
+they secured a great deal of their success at the polls
+through the bait of more land for the individual, which
+they dangled before the eyes of the most ignorant classes.
+Some of the electors who supported them were prosperous
+farmers unable to resist the idea of a still larger farm;
+but the majority of their adherents were as ignorant as
+they were gullible. Yet one should remember that for
+most of them this was practically their first experience
+of an election: the constituencies which had formerly
+been in Austria-Hungary had always seen the booths
+under the supervision of the police, while the Macedonian
+voter (three Communists were returned for Skoplje) had
+only known the institutions of the Turkish Empire.
+Being told by the Communists that their box at the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
+polling-station was really the box for the poor, the
+Fukara, all the gypsies and so forth of Skoplje, who had
+never voted in their lives, hastened to claim the privilege,
+under the impression that a Communist Government
+would liberate them from taxes and military service.
+Other reasons for the success of the Communists in Yugoslavia,
+an essentially non-industrial State, were the general
+discontent with post-war conditions, and the virus which
+so many of the voters had acquired in Russia or on the
+Dobrudja front during the War. The activity in the
+Skup&#353;tina of this very indigestible party&mdash;largely composed
+of Turks, Magyars, Albanians, Germans and others&mdash;their
+activity in and out of Parliament was not confined
+to words. In June 1920 they only refrained from throwing
+bombs in the Skup&#353;tina because one of their own
+members would have been in peril, and in December a
+plot against the Prince-Regent and some of the Ministers
+was foiled. Thereupon the Emergency Act of December
+27, the so-called Obznana, came into existence. It
+suspended all Communist associations. This Act was
+issued for the good of the country, but was not previously
+presented to the Constituent Assembly or provided with
+the royal signature. How justified were the authorities
+in thus putting a stop to this party could be seen when
+some of the Communist deputies were interrogated, for
+either they were dangerous fanatics or else very ignorant
+individuals, who knew no more about any other question
+than about Communism, and had only been elected
+because they professed dissatisfaction with things in
+general. A few months later Mr. Dra&#353;kovi&#263;, the very
+able Minister of the Interior, who had drawn up the
+Obznana, but who by that time had laid down the seals
+of office, was murdered by Communists at a seaside
+resort in the presence of his wife and little children.
+The object of this particular outrage was to persuade
+the authorities in panic to withdraw the hated Obznana,
+whereas the previous attempts on various personages
+seem to have been greatly due to the desire to show
+some positive result in return for the cash which came
+to them from Moscow. (One of the leaders of the party,
+the ex-professor of mathematics, was arrested last summer
+in Vienna on his return from Moscow, with a large and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
+very miscellaneous collection of English, French, American,
+Russian and other money.) After the murder of Mr.
+Dra&#353;kovi&#263; the mandates of the Communist deputies
+were suppressed; seven or eight of them were detained,
+for speedy trial, and the rest were told to go to their
+homes. The Communist parliamentary party was at an
+end&mdash;it was established that their Committee room in
+the Skup&#353;tina had been used for highly improper purposes&mdash;but
+there was nothing to prevent these ex-deputies
+from being elected as members of any other party, and
+it was rather beside the mark for an English review, the
+<i>Labour Monthly</i>,<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> to talk of the "White Terror in Jugo-Slavia,"
+as if there prevailed in that country anything
+comparable with Admiral Horthy's r&eacute;gime in Hungary.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">OTHER LIONS IN THE PATH</p>
+
+<p>The behaviour of the Communists was far from being
+the only clog in Yugoslavia's parliamentary machine.
+After the first General Election of November 1920&mdash;delayed
+until then on account of Italy's attitude, which
+made it impossible to demobilize the army&mdash;no single
+party nor even one of the large groups was possessed of a
+real working majority. Fierce and determined was the
+Opposition;<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> to carry on the business of government
+it became necessary to secure the coalition of several
+parties. The Radical and Democrat <i>bloc</i> had to attract
+to its side one or two other parties, and it was truly
+difficult to make concessions to anyone of these without
+rousing the righteous or the envious wrath of another
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>group. In principle it was proper that the Bosnian
+Moslems should receive compensation for their estates;
+the question is whether the very large sum was less in
+the nature of a fair price than of a bribe. The Radical
+party was no longer under its happy triumvirate of
+Pa&#353;i&#263;, the old diplomat, Proti&#263;, the executor of his ideas,
+and Patcho&ugrave;, a medical man from Novi Sad, the real
+brain of the party. We shall give an example of
+Patcho&ugrave;'s prudence; the long views which he possessed
+may be illustrated by what occurred at a meeting of
+Radical deputies two days before the outbreak of the
+second Balkan War. The Tzar's proposed arbitration
+was being discussed and certain deputies, such as the late
+Dr. Pavlovi&#263;, who was the first speaker of the Yugoslav
+Parliament after the Great War, raised their voices in
+opposition; they were supported by the army. "Can we
+have Bitolje (Monastir)?" they asked. "It is not known
+what the Tzar will decide," said Pa&#353;i&#263;. "Then we can't
+accept arbitration," said Pavlovi&#263;. And Patcho&ugrave; spoke.
+"I would be very glad to know," said he, "what Mr.
+Pavlovi&#263; would say if we could get, by possibly now
+sacrificing Bitolje, not only Bosnia, but Dalmatia and
+other Slav countries." "All that," said Pavlovi&#263;, "is
+music of the future." "For you perhaps," said Patcho&ugrave;,
+"but not for us." And the vote in favour of arbitration
+was carried. Patcho&ugrave; died in 1915 at Ni&#353;. Besides
+being an expert in finance and foreign affairs he was less
+arbitrary in his methods than Proti&#263;. That very erudite
+man&mdash;no sooner does an important book appear in Western
+or Central Europe than a copy of it goes to his library&mdash;has
+not been much endowed with patience. This brought
+him into conflict with his Democratic colleague Mr.
+Pribi&#269;evi&#263;, the most prominent man in that party. It
+would have been well if Dr. Davidovi&#263;, the gentle, tactful
+leader of the party, could have taken into his own composition
+one-half of his lieutenant's excessive combativeness.
+Pribi&#269;evi&#263; and Proti&#263; find it impossible to work
+together, and we can sympathize with both of them.
+One day at a more than usually disagreeable Cabinet
+meeting Pribi&#269;evi&#263; reminded the then Prime Minister
+that he was the first among equals, a point of view which
+did not square with the methods of Proti&#263;, who gives his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
+support to those Ministers who bend before him. And as
+Pribi&#269;evi&#263; has hitherto insisted on being in every Cabinet,
+Proti&#263; has withdrawn and has started a newspaper, the
+<i>Radical</i>, in which he attacks him with great violence
+and ability. One charge which he brings against this
+Serb from Croatia is perfectly true, for he has succeeded
+in alienating the Croats. Only two or three Democrat
+deputies come from Croatia, and they are elected by the
+Serbs who live in that province. It would seem that the
+Croats will remain in more or less active opposition so
+long as Pribi&#269;evi&#263;, the arch-centralizer who scorns to
+wear the velvet glove, stays in the Government. There
+is also much doubt as to whether Proti&#263; can break down
+their particularism, which, of course, is not an anti-national
+movement. But luckily, through other men,
+it will be stayed. For other reasons one regrets that
+Mr. Proti&#263; is not now in power; as the Finance Minister
+he knew how to introduce order, preferring the interests
+of the State to those of his party. Both Radicals and
+Democrats have been reluctant, for electoral purposes,
+to tax the farmer; and Mr. Proti&#263; would probably have
+the courage to impose a direct tax, as the Radicals did,
+without losing popular favour, in the old days. In this
+respect and concerning the numerous posts that have been
+created for party reasons it is thought that Mr. Pa&#353;i&#263;
+has not displayed sufficient energy.</p>
+
+<p>There was in Yugoslavia a heavy war deficit, both
+economic and financial. Communications were out of
+order and the State, owing to the adverse exchange
+(which was not justified by the economic potentialities
+of the country, but was probably caused by the unsettled
+conditions both internal and external), the State could
+not obtain the necessary raw products for industrial
+undertakings such as iron-works, tanneries, cloth factories,
+etc. The Yugoslavs did not borrow from abroad, as
+they might have done, in the form of raw materials.
+The agricultural products which were exported should
+have been sold for the needful manufacturers' material
+and not for articles of luxury and not for depreciated
+foreign, especially Austrian, currency.<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> The Yugoslav
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>public is slow to learn economy, that it should restrict
+the importation of luxuries. What makes it particularly
+unhappy, in which frame of mind it listens to the voices
+prophesying woe for Yugoslavia, is the knowledge that
+for increased production and for many other necessary
+aims more capital is wanted, whereas under present
+conditions it has been difficult to borrow. But happily in
+this respect the corner has been turned, and in the spring
+of 1922 a considerable loan was negotiated with an
+American syndicate.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE NADIR OF DEVINE AND NIKITA</p>
+
+<p>However, the principal disintegrating force in Yugoslavia,
+we were often told in England, was Montenegro,
+where, it seems, the natives were yearning to cast off
+their yoke. The British devotees of the former king
+told us of the ghastly state of Montenegro, and our
+Foreign Office was bombarded with reports which ascribed
+these evils to the wretched Government of Yugoslavia.
+"There is nothing anywhere," says a memorandum from
+the ineffable Devine. "The shops are empty, the town
+markets are deserted. The peasants, who may not travel
+from one village to another without a Serbian 'permit'
+... etc. etc." Well, I visited Cetinje market on a non-market
+day, and passing through the crowd of people
+I admired the produce of various parts of the country&mdash;melons,
+tomatoes, dried fish, onions, peaches, nuts and
+cheese, lemons from Antivari and so forth. I happened
+to ask a comely woman called Petrie&#269;evi&#263; from near
+Podgorica whether she had a permit; she looked surprised
+at such a question. It is very true that the more mountainous
+parts of Montenegro are far from prosperous,
+but to insinuate that this is the fault of the Government
+is childish. Hampered by the lack of transport&mdash;practically
+everything has to be brought on ox-carts up by the
+tremendous road from Kotor&mdash;they have recently given
+away 38,000 kilos of wheat and many mountain horses
+at Cetinje. I suppose it was all in the game for Devine
+and his assistants to throw mud at the Yugoslav Government
+if they believed that they would&mdash;for the happiness
+of the Montenegrins and themselves&mdash;help to restore<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
+Nikita. But what was the use of saying that "the poor
+people have no money and have nothing to eat; they
+are said to be living on a herb of some sort that grows
+wild in the mountains"?... A very satisfactory feature
+of the past year has been the migration of 7000 Montenegrins
+to more fertile parts of Yugoslavia. And as for
+Nikita's partisans, they were such small beer that when
+they wished to hold a meeting at Cetinje the Government
+had not the least objection; it also allowed them to sing
+the songs that Nikita wrote, but that was more than the
+population of Cetinje would stand. It is only at Cetinje,
+where he reigned for sixty years, and at Njegu&#353;, where
+he was born, that Nikita has any adherents at all. As for
+his adherents at Gaeta, the Cetinje authorities were
+perfectly willing to give a passport to any woman who
+desired to spend some time in Italy with her husband
+or brother or son. She might stay there or come back,
+just as she pleased. And very likely when she got to
+Gaeta she would relate how in the cathedral, at the rock-bound
+monastery of Ostrog, and in other sacred places,
+one could see the Montenegrin women cursing their ex-king.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">A GENERAL</p>
+
+<p>The sinister shadow of d'Annunzio had fallen across
+Dalmatia and beyond it: for instance, on November 20,
+1919, the King of Italy's name-day, a general holiday
+was proclaimed in the occupied districts. The director
+of the school at Zlosela, a Slav who had never been an
+Italian subject, gave&mdash;perhaps injudiciously&mdash;the usual
+lessons. He and his wife were arrested and for months
+they were in prison, their six-months-old child being left
+to the mercy of neighbours; and the local commandant,
+Major Gracco Golini, told Dr. Smol&#269;i&#263;, the President of
+the National Council, that the slightest action on the
+part of the Yugoslavs would provoke terrible measures
+on the part of d'Annunzio's arditi, who would spare
+neither women nor children.... The reader may remember
+the Montenegrin General Ve&#353;ovi&#263;, who took to
+the mountains and defied the Austrians. On the accession
+of the Emperor Karl he surrendered and, much to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+surprise of his people, he travelled round the country
+recommending every one to offer no more opposition, to
+be quiet and obedient to the Austrians. When the war
+was over the authorities at Belgrade gave him, as they
+did to other Montenegrin generals, the same rank in the
+Yugoslav army; but the numerous Montenegrins who
+resented his unpatriotic behaviour persuaded the War
+Office, after two or three months, to remove him from the
+active list. This exasperated the ambitious man to
+such an extent that he withdrew to his own district and
+began to work against Yugoslavia. A major with a
+force of 200 gendarmes was sent to fetch him back and,
+after conversations that lasted ten days, induced him to
+return to Belgrade. There he was not molested; he used
+to sit for hours in the large caf&eacute; of the Hotel Moscow in
+civilian clothes. But one day a policeman at the harbour
+happened to observe him talking for a long time to a
+fisherman; he wondered what the two might have in
+common. When the fisherman was interrogated he
+refused at first to give any information, but he finally
+divulged that he had agreed, for 1500 francs, to take the
+General down the Danube either to Bulgaria or Roumania.
+That evening at nine o'clock the General appeared, with
+his son and a servant; he was captured,<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> and among his
+documents were some which proved, it was alleged, that
+he was in communication with d'Annunzio.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">TWO COMIC PRO-ITALIANS IN OUR MIDST</p>
+
+<p>Month follows month. The reading public and some
+of the statesmen of the world begin to recognize that,
+whatever may be the case on other portions of the new
+map, there is nothing unreal or impossible or artificial
+about Yugoslavia. This State is the result of a national
+movement, having its origins within and not without
+the peoples whose destiny it affects. The various Yugoslavs,
+after being kept apart for all these centuries, have
+now&mdash;roughly speaking&mdash;come to that stage which the
+Germans reached in 1866. They cannot rest until they
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>reach the unity which came to the Germans after 1870.
+And here also, it seems, the unity will not be gained
+without the sacrifice of thousands of young men. "Go,
+my son," said Oxenstiern the Swedish Chancellor, "and
+observe by what imbeciles the world is governed." It
+is pitiable that the leaders of the nations, in declining
+month after month to give to Yugoslavia an equitable
+frontier, should apparently have been more impressed
+by the arguments of Mrs. Lucy Re-Bartlett<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> than by
+those of an anonymous philosopher in the <i>Edinburgh
+Review</i>.<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> "Nationality?" says the lady, speaking of
+the country people of Dalmatia, "nationality? These
+people of the country districts&mdash;the great mass of the
+population&mdash;are far too primitive to have any sense of
+nationality as yet, but if some day they call themselves
+Italian...." That is what she says of a people which
+through centuries of persecution and neglect have preserved
+their language, their traditions, their hopes; a
+people which, more than forty years ago, won their great
+victory against the Habsburg r&eacute;gime of Italian and
+Italianist officials, so that with one exception every mayor
+in Dalmatia and all the Imperial deputies and hundreds
+of societies of all kinds, such as 375 rural savings-banks,
+were exclusively Yugoslav. Out of nearly 150,000 votes
+at the last general election, which was held in 1911 on the
+basis of universal suffrage, the Yugoslav candidates
+received about 145,000 against 5000 to 6000 for the
+Italians. It is indisputable that the Dalmatian peasants
+are backward in many things, but one is really sorry for
+the person who declares in print that they possess no
+sense of nationality. Let her visit any house of theirs on
+Christmas Eve and watch them celebrate the "badnjak";
+let her listen any evening to their songs. Let her think
+whether there is no sense of nationality among the priests,
+who almost to a man are the sons of Yugoslav peasants.
+And let her recollect that these are the days when the
+other Yugoslavs are at last uniting in their own free
+State. She has the hardihood to tell us of the poor
+Dalmatians who were being bribed with waterworks and
+bridges and gratuitous doctoring. I daresay that the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>little ragged Slav children of Kievo whom she saw clustering
+round the kindly Italian officer were glad enough to
+eat his chocolates,<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> but I think that we others should pay
+more attention to those secret societies, the <i>&#269;etasis</i> (which
+is Slav for komitadjis), who have sworn to liberate all
+Istria from the Italians. We may also consider the
+proposals made by the Southern Slavs whom Signor
+Salvemini, the distinguished Professor of Modern History
+at Pisa, called "extreme Nationalists" (see his letter
+of September 11, 1916, to the editor of <i>La Serbie</i>, which
+was being published in Switzerland). Well, it appears
+that the "extreme Southern Slav Nationalists," as the
+utmost of their aspirations, claim the Southern Slav
+section of the province of Gorica with the town Triest
+and the whole of Istria, that is to say, a territory which,
+with a population the majority of whom are Slav, contains
+also 284,325 Italians, whereas the smallest programme
+ever proposed by moderate Italians, including
+Professor Salvemini, covets some 364,000 Southern Slavs.
+Thus the extreme Southern Slav elements, in their widest
+demands, are more moderate than the moderate Italians
+in their most limited programme. "Without distinction
+of tribe or creed," says that Edinburgh reviewer, "all
+the Yugoslavs are waiting for their 1870. This will fix
+and perpetuate their unity.... The preparation is
+going forward silently&mdash;almost sullenly&mdash;and without
+demur or qualification the Yugoslavs are accepting the
+Serb military chiefs' guidance and domination." He
+was much impressed by the silence and controlled power
+of the Serbian General Staff. There was in Europe a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>general war-weariness; but not in Yugoslavia. There
+was a hush in this part of Europe, broken only by the shrill
+screams of Italian propagandists and outbursts of suppressed
+passion on the other side.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE BELATED TREATY OF RAPALLO</p>
+
+<p>And the Rapallo Treaty of November 1920, when at
+last the statesmen of Italy and Yugoslavia came to
+terms regarding all their frontiers! This Treaty was
+received with much applause by the great majority of
+the French and British Press; in this country of compromise
+it was pointed out by many that as each party
+knew that the other had abated something of his desires
+the Treaty would probably remain in operation for a
+long time to come. And column after column of smug
+comment was written in various newspapers by the
+"Diplomatic Correspondent," whose knowledge of diplomacy
+may have been greater than his acquaintance with
+the Adriatic, since they followed one another, like a
+procession of sheep, in copying the mistake in a telegram
+which spoke of Eritto, the curious suburb of Zadar,
+instead of Borgo Erizzo. They noted that each side had
+yielded something, though it was true that the Yugoslavs
+had been the more generous in surrendering half a million
+of their compatriots, whereas the Italians had given up
+Dalmatia, to which they never had any right.<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> "The claim
+for Dalmatia was entirely unjustified," said Signor
+Colajanni in the Italian Chamber on November 23&mdash;yet
+it was not our business to weigh the profit and loss
+to the two interested parties. After all, it was they who
+had between themselves made this Agreement, and one
+might argue that it surely would be an impertinence if
+anybody else was more royalist than the king. These
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>commentators held that it was inexpedient for anyone
+to ask why the Yugoslavs should now have accepted
+conditions that were, on the whole, considerably worse
+than those which President Wilson, with the approval
+of Great Britain and France, had laid down as a minimum,
+if they were to realize their national unity. And, of
+course, these writers deprecated any reference to the
+pressure which France and Great Britain brought to
+bear upon the Yugoslavs when the negotiations at Rapallo
+were in danger of falling through. If we take two Scottish
+newspapers, the <i>Scotsman</i><a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> was typical of this very
+bland attitude; it congratulated everyone on the
+harmonious close to a long, intricate and frequently
+dangerous controversy. The <i>Glasgow Herald</i>,<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> on the
+other hand, was one of the few newspapers which took a
+more than superficial view. "Monstrous," it said, "as
+such intervention seems, no student of the Adriatic White
+Paper&mdash;as lamentable a collection of documents as British
+diplomacy has to show&mdash;can deny its possibility, nay its
+probability. It is precisely the same game as was nearly
+successful in January 1920 and again in April 1920, but
+both times was frustrated by Wilson. We are entitled
+to ask, for the honour of our nation, if it has been played
+again; indeed if the whole mask of direct negotiation&mdash;a
+British suggestion&mdash;was not devised at San Remo
+with the express purpose of making the game succeed.
+If it be so&mdash;and if it is not so it is imperative that we
+are given frankly the full story of British policy in the
+Adriatic, for instance the dispatches so carefully omitted
+from the White Paper&mdash;then our forebodings for the future
+are more than justified.... It is emphatically a bad
+settlement."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall not establish friendly and normal relations
+with our neighbour Italy unless we reduce all causes of
+friction to a minimum," said M. Vesni&#263;, the Yugoslav
+Prime Minister, who during his long tenure of the Paris
+Legation was an active member of the Acad&eacute;mie des
+Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres and other learned societies;
+he excelled in getting at the root of the worst difficulties
+in international law, and he was particularly admired
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>for his ability to combine legal and historic knowledge.
+Because he studied history minutely&mdash;with a special
+fondness for Gambetta who, racially an Italian, had something
+of the generous and sacred fervour that distinguished
+the leaders of the Risorgimento&mdash;M. Vesni&#263; could not
+bring himself to hate Italy, despite all that d'Annunzio
+and other Imperialists had made his countrymen suffer.
+"Neither the Government nor the elected representatives
+of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes," said he courageously
+in his first speech as Prime Minister, "ought
+to look upon Italy as an enemy country. We have
+to settle important and difficult questions with Italy....
+We must reduce all causes of friction to a
+minimum."</p>
+
+<p>The Treaty of Rapallo gives Zadar to Italy, because
+in that little town there is an Italian majority; but
+central and eastern Istria, with their overwhelming Slav
+majority, are not given to the Yugoslavs&mdash;a fact which
+Professor Salvemini deplored in the Roman Chamber.
+By the Treaty of Rapallo Rieka is given independence,<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a>
+but with Italy in possession of Istria and the isle of Cres,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>she can at any moment choke the unprotected port,
+having very much the same grip of that place as Holland
+has for so long had of Antwerp; and the sole concession
+on Italy's part seems to be that in the south she gives
+up the large Slav islands of Hvar, Kor&#269;ula and Vis, and
+only appropriates the small one of Lastovo.... "It
+has cost Italy a pang," says Mr. George Trevelyan,
+"to consent, after victory, to leave the devoted and
+enthusiastic Italians of the Dalmatian coast towns (other
+than Zara) in foreign territory." The truth is that
+henceforward Yugoslavia will contain some 5000 Italians
+(many of whom are Italianized Slavs), as against not less
+than 600,000 Slavs in Italy. And while the former are
+but tiny groups in towns which even under Venetian
+rule were predominantly Slav and are surrounded on all
+sides by purely Slav populations, the latter live for the
+most part in compact masses and include roughly one-third
+of the whole Slovene race, whose national sense is
+not only very acute, but who are also much less illiterate
+than their Italian neighbours. One cannot be astonished
+if the Slovenes think of this more than of Giotto, Leonardo,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>Galileo and Dante. But one may be a little surprised
+that such a man as Mr. Edmund Gardner should allow
+his reverence for the imperishable glories of Italy to
+becloud his view of the modern world. It is certainly a
+fact that the Slovenes are to-day less illiterate than the
+Italians, but because Dr. Seton-Watson alludes to this,
+Mr. Gardner (in the <i>Manchester Guardian</i>, of February
+13, 1921) deplores the "Balkanic mentality that
+seems to afflict some Englishmen when dealing with these
+problems."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">ITS PROBABLE FRUITS</p>
+
+<p>Now it is obvious that the Treaty of Rapallo has placed
+between the Yugoslavs and the Italians all too many
+causes of friction. Zadar, like other such enclaves, will
+be dear to the heart of the smuggler. She cannot live
+without her Yugoslav hinterland&mdash;five miles away in
+Yugoslavia are the waterworks, and if these were not
+included, by a special arrangement, in her dominion,
+she would have no other liquid but her maraschino. She
+cannot die without her Yugoslav hinterland&mdash;but so that
+her inhabitants need not be carried out into a foreign
+land, the cemetery has also, by stretching a point, been
+included in the city boundaries. It remains to be seen
+how Zadar and the hinterland will serve two masters.
+We have alluded to the questionable arrangements at
+Rieka, in which town there had for those years
+been such an orgy of limelight and recrimination that
+even the most statesmanlike solution must have left a
+good deal of potential friction. In Istria the dangers
+of an outbreak are evident. Italy has now become the
+absolute mistress of the Adriatic and has gained a
+strategical frontier which could hardly be improved upon,
+while Yugoslavia has been placed in an economic position
+of much difficulty. Sooner or later, if matters are left
+<i>in situ</i>, trouble will arise. Perhaps an economic treaty
+between Italy and Yugoslavia, as favourable as possible
+to the weaker State, would introduce some sort of stability;
+but no good cause would be served by crying "Peace"
+where there is no peace, and while Yugoslavia has a
+grievance there will be trouble in the Balkans.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The most serious phase of the Adriatic crisis is now
+ushered in, for a new Alsace has been created; and those
+who point this out cannot be charged with an excessive
+leaning towards the Yugoslavs. It also seems to me that
+one can scarcely say they are alarmists. If Yugoslavia,
+in defiance of that most immoral pressure, had declared
+for war, Vesni&#263; at the general election would have swept
+the country with the cry of "War for Istria!" To his
+eternal honour he chose the harder path of loyalty to the
+new ideas which Serbian blood has shed so freely to
+make victorious. A momentary victory has now been
+gained by the Italians, but not one that makes for peace.
+It poisons by annexations fundamentally unjustifiable,
+however consecrated by treaty, the whole source of
+tranquillity in the Near East. "Paciencia!" [Have
+patience] you say, in refusing to give alms to a Portuguese
+beggar, and he follows your advice. But when the
+Yugoslavs ask for a revision of the Treaty&mdash;if the Italians
+do not wisely offer it themselves&mdash;it would be rash if in
+attempting to foretell the future we should base ourselves
+upon the premise that their patience will be everlasting.
+A new Alsace has been created, an Alsace to which, in
+the opinion of competent observers, all the Yugoslavs
+will turn until the day comes when it is honourable to
+set the standards forth on a campaign of liberation.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">NEW FORCES IN THE FIRST YUGOSLAV PARLIAMENT</p>
+
+<p>When the Yugoslavs were at last in a position, late
+in 1920, to hold the elections for the Constituent Assembly
+the Radicals and the Democrats were the most successful,
+but even if they made a Coalition they would still have
+no majority. [Now and then the Democrats asserted
+themselves against the Radicals, but when the Opposition
+thought they could perceive a rift the Democratic Press
+would write that the two parties were most intimately
+joined to one another, and especially the Democrats.]
+The small parties were very numerous, the smallest being
+that of M. Ribarac, the old Liberal leader, who found
+himself in the Skup&#353;tina with nobody to lead; the
+clericals of Slovenia came to grief, a fact which appeared
+to give general satisfaction, and a similar mishap befell<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
+the decentralizing parties of Croatia. On the other hand
+the Croat Peasants' party, whose decentralization ideas
+were more extreme, had a very considerable success,
+and the Communist party, whose fall we have already
+described, had come to the Skup&#353;tina with some fifty
+members.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">(<i>a</i>) MARKOVI&#262; THE COMMUNIST</p>
+
+<p>The temporary triumph of the Communists was admittedly
+due to the exceptional position in which the country
+found itself. They had in Sima Markovi&#263; an enthusiastic
+leader who has abandoned the teaching of mathematics
+in order to expound the gospel of Moscow, and in the
+Skup&#353;tina the shrill, voice of this kindly, bald-headed
+little man had to be raised to its uttermost capacity, for
+most of his fellow-members were unwilling to be taught.
+It so happens that he is Pa&#353;i&#263;'s godson, and on one occasion
+when the little Communist was talking with great vehemence
+the old gentleman, who was turning over the
+pages of some document, was heard by an appreciative
+House to murmur: "Oh, be still, my child, be still!"
+But the most unfortunate episode in Markovi&#263;'s oratory
+was when he expressed the hope that Communism would
+rage through the country like an epidemic, forgetting for
+the moment that those municipalities which had gone
+over to Communism had won general praise for their
+improvements in the sanitary sphere. Largely on account
+of this infelicitous simile he was replaced in the leadership
+by another, a less vigorous and less entertaining
+person. And this party stood in particular need of
+attractive champions.</p>
+
+<p>The Croat Peasants' party, or the Radi&#263; party, as it
+came to be called, gave to its beloved chief more than
+half the seats in Croatia, forty-nine out of ninety-three;
+and the whole party refused to go to Belgrade.</p>
+
+<p>"Would it not have been better," I asked him, "if
+you had gone? The Constitution will be settled without
+you."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">(<i>b</i>) RADI&#262;, THE MUCH-DISCUSSED</p>
+
+<p>"We had various reasons," said he, "for not going.
+One of them was that the Assembly which laid down the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+Constitution was not sovereign. For example, it was
+not permitted to discuss whether Yugoslavia should be
+a monarchy or a republic. I admit that three-quarters
+of the members would very likely have voted for a
+monarchy, and in that case we should have accepted
+the situation very much as do the royalist deputies in
+the French Parliament."</p>
+
+<p>"What are your own views on this subject?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said he, "for this period of transition I
+believe&mdash;mark you, this only applies to myself&mdash;that a
+monarchy is not merely acceptable but preferable. On
+the other hand the Croat peasant was so badly treated
+by the Habsburgs that he will now hear of nothing but
+a republic."</p>
+
+<p>I ventured to say that this sudden conversion to
+republican ideas in one who for centuries had lived in a
+monarchy was peculiar, and Radi&#263; acknowledged that
+when the first republican cries were raised at a meeting
+of the Peasants' party on July 25, 1918 they came to him
+as a revelation, one which he accepted.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't accept everything that your peasants
+shout for?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not," said he. "There was a gentleman who
+asked them at a meeting whether they would kill him if
+he, elected as their representative, were to go to Belgrade.
+They shouted back that they would do so. And when
+the prospective candidate came to tell me this story,
+thinking that I would be delighted, I told him that a
+ship's captain cannot have his hands bound before undertaking
+a voyage and he must therefore withdraw his
+candidature.... When the time comes we will go to
+Belgrade."</p>
+
+<p>"And those who say that you are longing for the
+return of the Habsburgs?"</p>
+
+<p>He gripped my arm. "They are fools," said he.
+"We are looking forward as eagerly as the great Bishop
+Strossmayer to the union of the Southern Slavs. According
+to the spirit of his time he began at the top, with
+academies, picture galleries and so forth. We prefer
+to begin with elementary schools." And bubbling with
+enthusiasm he told me of the efforts his party was making.
+It was plain to see that what lies nearest to his heart is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
+to improve their social and economic status. And those
+observers are probably in the right, who believe that he
+merely uses this republican cry as a weapon which he
+will conveniently drop when it has served its purpose.</p>
+
+<p>"If only Yugoslavia had a great statesman," said I,
+"who would weld the new State together, so that the
+Croats remain with the Serbs not alone for the reasons
+that they are both Southern Slavs and that they are
+surrounded by not over-friendly neighbours. The great
+statesman&mdash;perhaps it will be Pa&#353;i&#263;&mdash;will make you all
+happy to come together."</p>
+
+<p>"From the bottom of my heart I hope he will succeed,"
+said Radi&#263;, "and he will be remembered as our second
+and more fortunate Strossmayer."</p>
+
+<p>We generally imagine that the statesmen of South-Eastern
+Europe are a collection of rather swarthy, frock-coated
+personages who, when not engaged in decrying
+each other, are very busily occupied in feathering their
+own nests. If any one of them, at the outset of his
+career, had a sense of humour we suppose that in this
+heated atmosphere it must have long ago evaporated.
+But strangely enough, the two most prominent politicians
+in Yugoslavia, the venerable Pa&#353;i&#263;, the Prime Minister
+of this new State of Serbs and Croats and Slovenes, even
+as he used for years to be the autocrat of Serbia, and his
+opponent Stephen Radi&#263; are, both of them, by the grace
+of God, of a humorous disposition. Outwardly, there
+is not much resemblance between them: Pa&#353;i&#263;, the
+picture of a benevolent patriarch, letting fall in his
+deep voice a few casual words which bring down his
+critics' case, hopelessly down like a wounded aeroplane,
+and Radi&#263; the fervid little orator, the learned man, whose
+life has been devoted to the Croat peasants and who is
+said to find it difficult to make a speech that is under
+eight hours in length. Last year when the vigorous
+Pribi&#269;evi&#263;, then Minister of the Interior, who is determined
+to compel the Serbs and the Croats straightway
+to live in the closest companionship, whereas Radi&#263;,
+supported by most of the Croat <i>intelligentsia</i>, argues
+that in view of their very different culture, the Serbs
+having enjoyed a Byzantine and the Croats an Austrian
+education, it would be advisable for these two branches<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
+of the South Slav nation to come gradually and not
+violently together,&mdash;last year when Radi&#263; was lying in
+prison on account of his subversive ideas Pribi&#269;evi&#263; sent
+a message to say that he was prepared to adopt half
+his programme. And Radi&#263; sent back word regretting
+that the Minister could not adopt the whole of it and thus
+obtain for himself the Peasants' party. It is wrong to
+assert that this party is unpatriotic; the enemies of
+Yugoslavia, who welcome in Radi&#263; a disruptive element,
+are totally in error. Years ago he was working for the
+eventual union of Serbs and Croats&mdash;the Austrians
+imprisoned him because in 1903 he went to Belgrade
+at the accession of King Peter and made an admirable
+speech to this effect&mdash;and his present attitude is due to
+the impatient manner in which Mr. Pribi&#269;evi&#263; and his
+friends are endeavouring to bring the union about. His
+peasants are a conservative people; they cannot instantly
+dispel the anti-Serb ideas which the Austrians for ever
+inculcated, nor the negative anti-Serb frame of mind
+which they learned from their own <i>intelligentsia</i>. It
+will take a little time before the Catholic peasant realizes
+that the Orthodox Serb is his brother and that now his
+military service will not be in an alien army, but in his
+own. "Let us go slowly," says Radi&#263;, "with our peasants";
+and he knows them very well.... One is told that he
+changes his opinions from hour to hour; he is certainly
+very impetuous, very much under the influence of his
+emotions; but in one thing he has never varied&mdash;he
+has always struggled for the Croat peasant, and he has
+been rewarded by the unbounded devotion of that faithful,
+rather incoherent, creature.</p>
+
+<p>Now the Serbs are a democratic people; they are by
+their nature in opposition to any force, civil or military,
+which might attempt to make the monarchy more absolute.
+The wisest Serbs do not forget that in the peasant
+lies their principal wealth, and although as yet the
+Serbian Peasants' party does not hold many constituencies
+in the old kingdom, nevertheless it appears to have
+a brighter prospect than any other Serbian party, for in
+that country the revolt against the lawyer-politician is
+likely to be more efficacious than in France or England.
+One may look forward to an understanding between<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
+Radi&#263; and this Serbian party, which is only two or three
+years old, although its founder, the excellent Avramovi&#263;&mdash;an
+elderly gentleman who sits behind vast barricades
+of books in various languages&mdash;has devoted himself
+for many years to agrarian co-operative societies, of
+which in Serbia there are more than 1500.</p>
+
+<p>The most uncertain factors seem to be the moderating
+hold of Radi&#263; over his peasants and over himself. No one
+doubts but that he has the interests of the peasant very
+much at heart, and if he succeeds in improving the
+peasant's lot then that grateful giant will presumably not
+sink again into the sleep which he enjoyed when he was
+under the Habsburgs. The circulation of Radi&#263;'s weekly
+paper <i>Dom</i><a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> ("The Home") has risen from 2000 before the
+elections and 9000 during the elections to 30,000. One
+enterprising vendor, a Serb from the Banat, takes 500
+copies a week and tramps over the countryside, disposing
+of his wares either for cash or for eggs, the latter of
+which he sells at the end of the week to a Zagreb hotel.
+The peasant is making great efforts to raise himself&mdash;a
+case has recently been brought to light of a farmer in
+Zagorija who, as a hobby, has taught more than 700
+persons to read and write. The peasant perceives that
+he has been assisted far less by the Catholic Church than
+by the work of Radi&#263;. It is not unfair to say that the
+Church desired, above all things, to keep the peasant
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>under her control. If a parish priest was disliked by his
+flock, so a prominent Croatian priest tells me, that was
+all the more reason why the Bishop refused to remove
+him. And the clergy, except for an enlightened minority,
+have been very much opposed to Radi&#263;'s policy of
+democratizing the Church.... In return for his unceasing
+labours he has now secured the peasant's love
+and confidence. He will retain them if he satisfies his
+client, and it seems to be within his power&mdash;gaining
+for him a better position and dissuading him from fantastic
+demands. He can be of immense assistance in the task
+of building up the State. But will the brilliant flame
+within him burn with steadiness? Has he got sufficient
+strength of will? With all his qualities of heart and
+brain he has not managed to discard his zig-zag impetuosity.
+The peasants, who recognize his talents, ask him
+to captain the ship; but he runs down too often into his
+cabin and leaves the unskilled sailors on the bridge.
+Down in the cabin he is feverishly and with great skill
+writing a contradiction of a pronouncement he made
+yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>Those who are openly sailing in Radi&#263;'s boat are for
+the most part the hard-headed peasants. Yet a number
+of the <i>intelligentsia</i> are coming on board&mdash;some of them,
+no doubt, with a view to their own advancement, but
+others on account of their convictions. And a still
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>greater number of the Croat <i>intelligentsia</i> look on him
+with sympathy&mdash;municipal officials, barristers, doctors,
+merchants, schoolmasters and military officers. It is
+most foolish to pretend that all these people are thinking
+regretfully of the old Habsburg days&mdash;they are, in the
+vast majority, sincere and loyal Yugoslavs who have
+certain grievances. They do not believe that Croatia has
+fared very well since the institution of the new State
+and it would seem wise to give them as much autonomy
+as is consonant with the interests of the whole country,
+for then they will only have themselves to blame if there
+is no improvement. Maybe they are unduly sensitive,
+but they were for many years in political warfare with
+the Magyars and this should be taken into consideration.
+Even if all the grievances are based on misconceptions,
+on the difficulties of the moment, on the circumstances
+of the fading past&mdash;the new generation of Croats, say
+their teachers, are growing up to be excellent Yugoslavs&mdash;yet
+an effort should be made to sweep them away.</p>
+
+<p>When Belgrade makes a statesmanlike gesture then
+Radi&#263; will probably be able to persuade the peasants
+to abandon their republican slogan&mdash;both they and the
+<i>intelligentsia</i> will abandon their reserved attitude towards
+the Government which they were far from entertaining
+when the State was first established. It seems as if the
+role of conciliator may well be filled by that wise old
+man, Nicholas Pa&#353;i&#263;, who is now no longer a mere Balkan
+Premier. When he was that he very properly used
+Balkan methods, despite the stern remarks of a few
+Western critics.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE SERBS AND THE CROATS</p>
+
+<p>We have alluded to the relations between Serbs and
+Croats. This is a subject of such importance that it
+will be well to consider it more fully. When Yugoslavia
+sprang into existence at the end of the War&mdash;70 per cent.
+of this State having previously been under the rule of
+the House of Habsburg&mdash;it was met in various quarters
+with a grudging welcome. Soon, we were told, it would
+dissolve again, and every symptom of internal discontent
+was treated as a proof of this. On the other hand there<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
+were those who told us that the Southern Slavs, having
+come together after all these hundreds of years, were
+tightly clasped in each others' arms and that all reports
+to the contrary came from very interested parties.</p>
+
+<p>Little was said of the Slovenes; their language, as
+we have mentioned, is not the same as that spoken
+by Serbs and Croats, and&mdash;what is of still greater importance&mdash;they
+have Slovenia to themselves. If Croatia
+were equally immune from Serbs, then by this time the
+Southern Slavs would be a more united nation. Those
+people were wrong who fancied that the presence of the
+Serbs in Croatia&mdash;they form between one-fourth and one-third
+of the population&mdash;would be of service in welding
+together the new State. They forgot that for many
+years the Austro-Hungarian Government had in Croatia
+played off the Roman Catholic Croats against the
+Orthodox Serbs. The two Slav brothers were incited
+to mutual hatred, and though such a propaganda would
+naturally have more effect among the uneducated classes,
+yet all too often the <i>intelligentsia</i> responded to these
+machinations. More favour, of course, was shown to
+the Croats, whose obedience could largely be secured by
+means of the Church, whereas no similar pressure could
+be brought to bear upon the Orthodox Serbs. Even if
+the Government approached the Orthodox clergy, these
+latter had only a very moderate control over their flock.
+A Serb is always ready to subscribe towards the erection
+of a new church, which he regards as most other nations
+regard their flag; but when it is built he rarely enters
+it. This being so, the Austro-Hungarian Government
+tyrannized over the Serbs in Croatia by measures taken
+against their schools, the Cyrillic alphabet and so forth.
+It was natural that the suffering Serbs were apt to compare
+these restrictions with those that were imposed
+upon the Croats. However, among the <i>intelligentsia</i> an
+effort&mdash;a fairly successful effort&mdash;was made to nullify
+this dividing policy; the Serbo-Croat Coalition was
+formed, one of the protagonists being Svetozar Pribi&#269;evi&#263;,
+that very energetic Serb of Croatia, and in 1906 this party
+obtained no less than sixty-eight seats, while the power
+of the older Croat parties was correspondingly diminished
+and Radi&#263; had his very small following in the Zagreb<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
+Lantag. [Those who represented Croatia in the central
+Parliament at Buda-Pest were chosen by the Ban, Khuen-Hed&eacute;rv&aacute;ry.
+Those forty members had practically no
+acquaintance with the Magyar language, so that some of
+them drew their 8000 annual crowns and only went to
+Pest if an important division was expected, others who
+spent more time in the capital wasted their lives amid
+surroundings just as riotous as and more expensive than
+the Parliament, while only those did useful work who
+managed to confer, behind the scenes, with the authorities.
+To some extent this was done by Pribi&#269;evi&#263; and to a
+greater extent by another Serb, Dr. Du&#353;an Popovi&#263;, who
+surpassed him in capacity and geniality. It was he,
+by the way, who demonstrated in the Buda-Pest Parliament
+that if the average Croat deputy was ignorant of
+the Magyar language, there was a greater ignorance of
+Serbo-Croatian on the part of the Magyars. One day
+when he had started on a speech in his native tongue he
+was howled down after he had explained that he was
+talking Serbian. He promised to continue in Croatian,
+and did so without being interrupted.]</p>
+
+<p>At Zagreb the fusion of the Croat and Serb <i>intelligentsia</i>
+was still very incomplete at the outbreak of the
+War&mdash;the Croat Star&#269;evist party and others going their
+own way. During the War the Austro-Hungarian
+Government ruled by means of the Coalition party; but
+the latter had no choice, and throughout Croatia they
+were never charged with infidelity to the Slav cause.
+They did whatever their delicate situation permitted;
+and in October 1918, when the Slavs of Croatia and
+Slovenia threw off the yoke of centuries and joined with
+the Serbs of Serbia and Montenegro, one hoped that the
+simultaneous arrival in Belgrade of the Coalition and the
+Star&#269;evist leaders heralded in Croatia a cessation of the
+ancient hostility. Pribi&#269;evi&#263; became Minister of the
+Interior in the new State, and very soon it was obvious
+that he meant to govern in a centralizing fashion, despite
+his earlier assurance that no such steps would be taken
+without the sanction of the Constituent Assembly. No
+doubt his motives were unimpeachable; he feared lest
+the negative, anti-Serb mentality, which for so long had
+flourished among the Croats, would not, except by drastic<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
+methods, be removed. He was met with opposition.
+Now you see, he cried, there are still in Croatia a number
+of disloyal Slavs, great landowners, Catholic clergy and
+others whom the Habsburgs used to favour. And he
+continued, with hundreds of edicts, to try to weld the
+State together. Consumed with patriotism, his great
+black eyes on flame amid the pallor of his face&mdash;his luminous
+and martyred face, to use the expression of his friends&mdash;he
+never for a moment relaxed his efforts; if those who
+opposed him were numerous it was all the more reason why
+he must be resolute. The r&ocirc;le fitted him very well, for he is
+the dourest politician in Yugoslavia&mdash;a perfectly honest, upright,
+injudicious patriot. His Democratic party had now
+taken the place of the Serbo-Croat Coalition and it saw the
+other parties in Croatia gradually drifting back again from
+it or rather from the dominating man; if his place had been
+occupied by his afore-mentioned colleague, the burly and
+beloved Du&#353;an Popovi&#263;, there would have been in Zagreb a
+very much suaver atmosphere. But unfortunately Popovi&#263;
+is a wealthy man, a highly successful lawyer who cares little
+for the tumult of politics.... It was a thorny problem,
+whether the State should be constituted on a federal
+or a centralized basis.<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> The federation of the United
+States depends on the centralization of political parties,
+whereas in Yugoslavia the parties have only just begun
+to combine. Feudalism in the German Empire rested on
+the predominance of Prussia, a position which the Serbs
+are, under present conditions, loth to occupy in Yugoslavia.
+In Germany, moreover, many of the States used
+to be independent, while in Yugoslavia this was only the
+case with Serbia and Montenegro. Centralism would
+tend to obliterate the tribal divisions, but on the other
+hand it brings in its train bureaucracy, which is slow,
+cumbrous and often corrupt; it demands unusually good
+central institutions and first-rate communications, neither
+of which are as yet in a satisfactory state. The constitution
+has arrived at a compromise between the federal
+and the centralized systems. A writer in the <i>Contemporary
+Review</i> (November 1921) said that the division
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>of the whole of Yugoslavia into some twenty administrative
+areas [he should have said thirty-three] to
+replace the racial areas, was a very drastic proposal to
+put forward; and he added that when the historic
+provincial divisions of France were broken up into departments,
+the nation had been prepared by nearly 200 years
+of centralization under the monarchy. It is a flaw in his
+argument to say that the previously existing areas were
+racial, whereas populations of identical race were divided
+from one another by the course of events. And in the
+proposed obliteration of these divisions&mdash;to be effected
+in a less arbitrary fashion than in France, where no account
+was taken of the former provinces&mdash;it can scarcely be
+maintained that, of itself, this part of the centralizing
+programme in Yugoslavia is so very drastic.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever one may think about the Balkan peoples
+it is a fact that the essential Serb, the Serb from &#352;umadia,
+is a pacific person, rather lazy perhaps, but certainly
+more devoted to dancing than to battle. And some of
+the wiser Serbs were dubious in 1919 and 1920 as to
+whether the most sagacious methods were being employed
+in Croatia. Radi&#263; was in prison, but they were told that
+this impetuous demagogue was insisting on a republic,
+and the Croat <i>intelligentsia</i> were far from happy. It is
+true that in the elections of November 1920 the National
+party, as the Star&#269;evists now called themselves, had no
+great success; but the Radi&#263; party had more than half
+the seats. Surely this had not been brought about
+merely by the chief's imprisonment? There seemed to
+be in that province some wider, some growing dissatisfaction.
+And in the spring of 1921 most of the Catholic
+Croats, those within and those without the Radi&#263; party,
+were nourishing a score of grievances. No doubt a large
+proportion of these were unavoidable (in view of the state
+of Central Europe) or were rather trivial (the mayor of an
+important town told me that he, who was under the
+Minister of the Interior, had received an order from the
+Belgrade Minister of War, with respect to the detention
+of deserters&mdash;conditions, said he, were not so primitive in
+the Austro-Hungarian monarchy) and sometimes the
+grievances were against the Habsburgs (for not having
+made them more fit to assume these new responsibilities),<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
+and sometimes they were against the Serbs for being less
+civilized&mdash;though they might be more moral&mdash;than
+themselves, and sometimes the grievances were personal:
+now and then after the Austrian collapse a Serbian
+officer or his men, uncertain of the feelings of the population,
+had acted with unwise, or rather with inexpedient,
+vigour&mdash;instead of shooting those who in the general
+anarchy were laying waste and plundering, they merely
+flogged them, and this was for a long time remembered
+against them, although the Croat <i>intelligentsia</i> who had
+taken service in the police flogged in a far more wholesale
+fashion. But down at the bottom of all the grievances
+there is the fundamental fact that the Southern Slavs
+yearn to be comrades, to shake off the differences which
+in the course of ages have grown up between them.
+These fraternal sentiments may be crudely expressed&mdash;it
+has happened that a Slav from Bosnia (whose
+ancestors adopted Islam some centuries ago) finds himself
+in a Serbian village. He strikes up acquaintance with
+some native. "What is your name?" asks the latter.
+"Muhammed." The Serb has never heard of such a
+name; he is puzzled. "Well, never mind," says he, and
+takes his new friend back to dinner. They sit down to
+the sucking pig. Muhammed refuses to partake of it, and
+informs the Serb that Allah would be angry. "Don't be
+afraid," says the Serb; "I'll tell him that it's my fault,"
+and after a time he overcomes the Bosniak's scruples....
+In more cultured circles the wonderful union of the
+Southern Slavs is manifested after a different fashion, and
+those neighbours who imagine that the afore-mentioned
+grievances are going to dissolve the new State will one
+day see how much they are mistaken. The Southern
+Slavs intend to quarrel with each other, to quarrel like
+brothers.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE SAD CASE OF PRIBI&#268;EVI&#262;</p>
+
+<p>As between the Catholic and the Orthodox in Croatia
+the sole uncertainty is whether this fusion will shortly
+take place or after an interval. It is agreed by the most
+malcontent schoolmasters that their pupils are growing
+up to be excellent Yugoslavs who will have no more<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
+fear of what they call "Serb hegemony" than have the
+Scots of that of England. As for the present generation
+of Croats and Serbs, if they were Occidentals they would
+be old enough to laugh at each others' peculiarities and
+each others' statesmen. But South-Eastern Europe is
+still under the morning clouds, and they are inclined to
+take seriously what we in the West make fun of. However,
+there is one man whose presence in the Cabinet
+the Croats cannot be expected to regard with good-humour
+or with nonchalance. The reconciliation of
+Croatia will be much more easily effected if Mr. Pribi&#269;evi&#263;
+resigns. His merits as a demagogue and political writer
+are undeniable. He would make an excellent Whip.
+But he prefers to be a Minister, and most unfortunately
+he is not a statesman. A zealous patriot, he is as yet
+unable to conceive that the business of the State could
+be more successfully managed without him. The sweets
+of office appear, if anything, to have made him more
+bitter; and even among the Serbs of the old kingdom
+his withdrawal is considered advisable. A friend of his
+has told me that in the middle of a laughing conversation
+he threw out a hint of this, and like a cloud blown suddenly
+across a summer sky, Pribi&#269;evi&#263;'s face grew black. Unhappily
+he is not even Fortinbras and yet imagines he is
+Hamlet. A good many people in Yugoslavia call him
+<i>un homme fatal</i>, most of the others <i>l'homme fatal</i>. It is
+said that in the Democratic party he is actively supported
+by not more than ten deputies, but that the others, to
+preserve the party, take no steps. He himself, however,
+would probably have not the least hesitation in choosing
+another party, if he could otherwise not stay in the
+Cabinet; for his permanence in office is the one idea
+that crushes every other from his mind. If he cannot
+be Minister of the Interior&mdash;a post from which he has
+been more than once, and happily for Yugoslavia, ejected&mdash;then
+he insists on being Minister of Education. What
+are his qualifications? Years ago he gave instruction
+at a school for elementary teachers, and so faint a conception
+has he of the educational needs of his country
+that one day when a Professor of Belgrade University
+asked him if no steps could be taken to diminish the
+prohibitive cost of books, especially foreign books, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
+Minister simply stared at him as if he had been talking
+Chinese. And yet in a recent book of national verses,
+published by his brother Adam, we are told that:</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="font-size: 90%"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"At the table also sat the sage Pribi&#269;evi&#263;,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who can converse with Emperors...."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>There are some who, curiously, have compared
+Radi&#263;'s party with the Sinn Feiners; Radi&#263; may have
+announced that he would approach the Serbs as the
+representative of an independent country, but he never
+proposed, even when his views were most extreme, to
+realize them with physical force. At a great open-air
+meeting of his adherents the speeches were so mild that
+only twice did the Chief of Police, who was next to me,
+raise a warning finger, and on each occasion to keep the
+orator from very innocent digressions. Nevertheless,
+there is no concealing the fact that even in these unsatisfactory
+times&mdash;"It seems to me," said a philosophic
+peasant recently at Valjevo, in the heart of Serbia, "it
+seems to me that if we had a plebiscite then Valjevo
+might not wish to remain with Serbia!"&mdash;even in a
+world that is so awry the Croats are more reserved towards
+the union than is good for the State. Perhaps they
+would cherish fewer grievances if they had gained their
+freedom with greater difficulty; and surely they need
+have no more uneasiness than have the Scots that their
+name and nationality will be swamped, for what the
+Magyars were unable to do, that the Serbs do not wish
+to do. There are among the Serbs a few extremists,
+such as a pernicious editor or two, but their anti-Croat
+tirades find extremely little favour anywhere. Last
+autumn when the Prince-Regent (now King Alexander)
+visited the Croat capital his reception was most enthusiastic.
+"Let us keep him here!" cried the people, "and
+let King Peter stay in Belgrade!" The Prince by his
+tact brought the Croat out of his tent; he must not be
+allowed to go back again&mdash;let the Southern Slavs observe
+what each of their provinces can bring towards the
+common good. The Croats acknowledge that the military
+system of Serbia is more endurable&mdash;only one son is
+taken out of each family&mdash;and that whereas in Slovenia
+a lawsuit can be settled in fourteen days it has been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
+wont in Croatia to take as many years. Unfortunately
+human nature, in Serbia, Croatia and everywhere else,
+finds that the bad points of other people are more worthy
+of comment than the good. When two brothers have
+been brought up in very different circumstances there
+will be so many points on which they differ; and when a
+Serb taking part in a technical discussion of scientists
+wishes to say that he differs from the previous speaker
+he will commonly observe that that person has made a
+fool of himself. When an editor alludes to a political
+opponent he may call him an assassin and be much
+astonished if this is resented. "Je suis un ours," said
+a Serbian savant of European repute; occasionally he
+behaves like one and is rather proud of it. The Serbs
+of Croatia have been imitating, nay exaggerating, the
+emphatic manners of their countrymen in the old kingdom.
+And Pribi&#269;evi&#263;, as Minister of Education, has not attempted
+to give the Croats a tactful course in courage,
+patriotism and morality, where they have much to learn
+from the less civilized Serbs, but scowling at them he
+has made up his mind that, in and out of school, they
+must straightway be the closest of companions.</p>
+
+<p>However, the Serbs and Croats have a man whose
+counsel is more worthy of attention. Dr. Trumbi&#263;,
+formerly the Minister of Foreign Affairs, had been elected
+at the head of four different lists in his native Dalmatia
+but had entered the Constituent Assembly without giving
+his allegiance to any party. And in April 1921 he made
+a speech as memorable as it was long, for it occupied
+the whole of one sitting and was continued the next day.
+Careless of the applause and the antagonism which he
+excited, the serene orator pointed out that the conflict
+between Serbs and Croats was based on their different
+psychology. Croatia had had her independent life and
+must be considered as a factor in Yugoslavia; but having
+come in, like Montenegro, of her own accord, she had not
+wished to be a separate factor. Traditions should not
+be so lightly set aside; and while there was perhaps no
+people more homogeneous than the Yugoslavs it should
+be remembered that none was more ready to resist the
+application of force.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">LESSONS OF THE MONTENEGRIN ELECTIONS</p>
+
+<p>Except at Kola&#353;in, where a few friends of Nikita
+tried their brigand tactics, there was perfect calm in
+Montenegro during the elections. As elsewhere in Yugoslavia,
+there was a general amnesty and a prohibition,
+for the three preceding days, to sell wine or rakia. The
+ten elected candidates, all of them for the Yugoslav
+union and against Nikita, were equally divided between
+Radicals and Democrats on the one hand and Communists
+and Republicans on the other. The authorities took
+not the slightest step to favour any candidate; various
+prominent deputies, such as Dr. Yoyi&#263;, the Minister of
+Food Supply, were beaten. And in a letter to the Press
+we were told by Mr. Ronald M'Neill, M.P., that these
+elections were certainly both "farcical and fraudulent."
+He is contradicted by Mr. Roland Bryce, who, after his
+excellent work on the Allied Plebiscite Commission in
+Carinthia, was sent by the Foreign Office with Major
+L.&nbsp;E. Ottley to report on the Montenegrin elections.
+He says (in Command Paper I., 124) that "in actual
+practice the method of voting prescribed by the electoral
+law was found to ensure absolute secrecy (the system
+adopted being the only feasible one in a country where
+the proportion of illiterates is great), and the manner
+in which the ballot was supervised and carried out was
+unimpeachable and proof against the most exacting
+criticism." Mr. M'Neill is also contradicted by the
+Republican candidate, M. Gjonovi&#263;, who in a manifesto
+drawn up after the election declares that "none can say
+that the elections were not free, or that anyone who
+wished could not make up a list. At the elections only
+the lists and boxes of the Republicans, Democrats, Independents,
+Radicals and Communists were represented.
+All of these parties had in their programmes the motto
+'The people and State union,' with, of course, different
+points of view and different opinions as to the organization
+of our national and State forces, except the Communists,
+who go further and desire the union of all
+peoples."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">WHICH ONE GENTLEMAN REFUSES TO TAKE</p>
+
+<p>It will thus be seen that the friends of Nikita were
+altogether wrong in suggesting that those who voted
+for the Republicans or Communists were opposed to the
+union with Serbia in Yugoslavia. Both Republicans
+and (paradoxical though it sounds) the Communists
+resented this insinuation very bitterly; and considering
+that the leaders of both parties are pronounced antagonists
+of the old r&eacute;gime, and were indeed severally condemned to
+death by Nikita, it would have been strange if they now
+supported him. Thus every single programme put forward
+by the different parties included, in some form or other,
+union with Serbia. The candidates themselves explicitly
+said so; but Mr. M'Neill knows better, and informs
+us how very hostile to the Serbs they really were. He
+is a wonderful man, Mr. M'Neill. Standing up in the
+House of Commons he directs his penetrating gaze upon
+the Black Mountain, and with such effect that he can see
+in the minds of Montenegrin politicians what they themselves
+had never dreamed of. Since we have such a
+man as Mr. M'Neill in the country, one would think that
+the Foreign Office might have saved itself the expense
+of sending out Mr. Bryce and Major Ottley.</p>
+
+<p>But since we have it, let us look at Mr. Bryce's very
+interesting and detailed report. After explaining that
+both Republicans and Communists were in favour of
+union with Serbia, he tells us how it happened that so
+many people voted for these two lists instead of for the
+orthodox Radical and Democratic parties. The Communists,
+according to Mr. Bryce, were benefited by a
+party organization, a vigorous canvass and a better
+discipline than that of any of their opponents. Their
+policy won the support of many ardent and very patriotic
+Nationalists, who voted in many cases for Communism
+on the ground that it was the Russian policy&mdash;out of
+gratitude for what the Tzars had done for Montenegro
+in the past! Major Temperley, assistant military attach&eacute;,
+in another report (Command Paper I., 123) observes that
+some local discontent had arisen in Montenegro because
+the native does not understand, and has never experienced<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
+before, a really efficient system of government, and
+because the introduction of conscription was not well
+adapted to the national tradition of lawless and untrained
+vigour. Major Temperley testifies that the Republican
+party gained the suffrages of numerous returned emigrants
+who admired the state of things in America. He shares
+Mr. Bryce's opinion as to the insignificance of the pro-Nikita
+party. "Even making large allowances," says
+he, "there seemed to me to be no doubt that the pro-Nicholas
+party were the weakest in Montenegro." Certain
+of his devotees were simply brigands who, like the
+Neapolitan miscreants after 1860, sought to cast a glamour
+over their depredations by affecting to be in arms on
+behalf of their former King. This personage himself
+was so well aware of his unpopularity that he was prudent
+enough to tell his supporters to abstain from voting.
+Those who did abstain were altogether only 32&middot;69 per cent.
+of the electors, though one would have been justified
+in expecting a much higher proportion, since the people
+have not yet fully grasped their rights and duties with
+respect to the franchise; the distances to the booths were
+often very great, and the peasants were often indifferent
+as to whether one candidate or another with a very
+similar programme should be elected. The tribal or
+family system is still so prevalent in the villages that one
+member of a family would be sent to express the considered
+views of his fellows. The effect of the elections
+being held on a Sunday was to increase rather than
+diminish the number of abstainers, for although Sunday
+is a public holiday the Christian Montenegrin is under no
+obligation to hear Mass and for that reason travel to the
+village. The churches are practically deserted, for he
+is accustomed on that day to remain at home; while
+the Moslem voters largely declined to vote because there
+were no Moslem candidates. That is why it would appear
+that those of the 32&middot;69 per cent. who abstained because
+they were in favour of Nikita were extremely few. Their
+simple-mindedness has its limits, while that of good
+Mr. M'Neill believes that because France, Great Britain
+and America undertook to restore Montenegrin independence,
+they were still obliged to do so after they perceived
+at the conclusion of the War that an overwhelming<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
+majority of Montenegrins did not desire it. This majority
+dethroned its traitor-king; but Mr. M'Neill maintains
+that France and England have dethroned "a monarch
+who was a friend and an ally."<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> Because M. Poincar&eacute;,
+in the days before the Montenegrins had rejected Nikita,
+addressed him as "Very Dear and Great Friend"&mdash;the
+ordinary form of words for a reigning monarch&mdash;Mr.
+M'Neill actually seems to think that France was for
+evermore compelled to clasp Nikita to her bosom. He
+clearly admires those who, since the end of the War,
+have risen in the cause of their old King; and I suppose
+that in consequence he disapproves of the Omladina,
+the voluntary association of men who banded themselves
+together to resist the terrorism of the pro-King komitadjis.
+If he had been in Montenegro during the years after the
+War he would possibly agree that komitadji is the proper
+name for the many lawless elements who have found
+the traditional fighting life more congenial than the
+thankless task of tilling their very barren land. The
+moral effect of opposing to these the Montenegrin Omladina
+instead of Serbian troops was to destroy all pretence of
+the movement being a national Montenegrin insurrection
+against the union, and the cessation of assistance from
+Italy resulted in the complete suppression of the movement.
+The few outlaws who still remain at large, said
+Mr. Bryce in December 1920, are in no sense political,
+but are merely bandits. And as the Omladina has now
+no <i>raison d'&ecirc;tre</i> they have disbanded themselves. Much
+now depends on the Constitution. If it gives them equal
+rights&mdash;and naturally it will&mdash;with the other inhabitants
+of Yugoslavia the Montenegrins will be content.</p>
+
+
+<p style="padding-top: 1.5em">In August 1921 the <i>Secolo</i> of Milan sent a famous
+correspondent to Montenegro. He came to much the
+same conclusions as Messrs. Bryce and Temperley. Not
+a single political prisoner was to be found, and not one
+of the ex-soldiers who returned from Gaeta had been
+molested. The correspondent thought that the Serbs
+had been ill-advised at the beginning to employ forcible
+methods against the pro-Nikita partisans who were
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>opposed to Yugoslavia; they should, said he, have let
+the pear ripen spontaneously and fall into their lap.
+But now their policy had become one of conciliation:
+during the last two and a half years Montenegro had
+received from Belgrade for public works, pensions and
+subsidies, 93 million dinars, and had paid in taxes only 5
+millions. Secondary education had been increased, and
+700 Montenegrin students (of whom 500 are allotted
+a monthly grant) frequent Yugoslav universities. The
+fertile lands of Yugoslavia were open to Montenegrin
+emigration. In fact an isolated, independent Montenegro
+was no longer needed. With the disappearance of the
+Turk from all Serbian territory in 1913 a return to the
+union of the Serbs, as in the days of Stephen Du&#353;an,
+was only hindered by historical, sentimental and, above
+all, by dynastic reasons. It was sad, quoth the correspondent,
+that the glorious history of Montenegro should
+have come to such a tame end, but her historic mission
+was closed in 1913, even as that of Scotland in 1707,
+to the benefit of both parties. Now the Serbs were
+leaving them to manage their own affairs; many ex-Nikita
+officials had been confirmed in their posts, while
+officers were given their old rank in the Yugoslav army.
+It is unfortunate for itself that the "Near East" (of
+London) does not employ so discerning a correspondent.
+We should then hear no more of such folly as that which&mdash;to
+select one occasion out of many&mdash;caused it in November
+1921 to speak about "the forcible absorption of Montenegro."
+And the world may be pardoned if it is more
+ready to accept the observations made on the spot by
+an expert Italian correspondent rather than the futile
+remarks sent by the Hon. Aubrey Herbert from the
+House of Commons, also in November 1921, to the
+<i>Morning Post</i>. This gentleman informs us that "it was
+probably because the Yugoslav Government was allowed
+to annex the ancient principality of Montenegro, exile
+its King, and subjugate its people, without any interference
+from the Great Powers, that M. Pasitch thought
+that he could do as he liked in Albania." That is the
+sort of statement which one may treat with Matthew
+Arnold's "patient, deep disdain."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">MEDI&AElig;VAL DOINGS AT RIEKA</p>
+
+<p>On July 14, 1920, a letter marked "urgent" (No.
+2047) was written by Colonel Sani, the Chief of
+d'Annunzio's Cabinet, in which he confirmed the orders
+which he had already given verbally, to the effect that
+all the foreign elements, especially the Serbs and Croats,
+who "exercise an obnoxious political influence," should
+be expelled from Rieka at the earliest possible date; he
+mentions that this is the command of d'Annunzio, who
+is in full accord with the President of the Consiglio
+Nazionale. This was the continuation of a practice which
+the Italian authorities had carried on in a wholesale
+manner. Father J.&nbsp;N. Macdonald, in his unimpeachable
+little book, <i>A Political Escapade</i> (London, 1921), gives us
+numerous examples of persons who in the most wanton
+fashion were expelled from the town. Thus a merchant
+called Pliskovac was arrested by the carabinieri, while
+talking to some English soldiers. After three days, spent
+under arrest, he was told that he would have to depart
+"from Italy" (<i>sic</i>). He was given a <i>faglio di via obligatorio</i>
+by the carabinieri, according to which he was
+banished on the ground of being "unemployed." Yet
+this man had had a fixed residence in Rieka for thirty-six
+years, was employed as a merchant, and furnished with a
+regular industrial certificate.... His name had been
+found on one of the lists in favour of annexation to
+Yugoslavia. When the world in general turned its
+attention away from Rieka, very much relieved to think
+that there would be an end to all the turmoil now that
+an agreement had at last been reached and the poor
+harassed place was to be neutral, it presumed that those
+among her citizens who had been openly in arms against
+the other party would as soon as possible resign. They
+would have been astonished to be told that the notorious
+self-elected Consiglio Nazionale Italiano, under the selfsame
+President, Mr. Grossich, cheerfully remained in
+office. It is true that they now called themselves the
+"Provisional Government"; in Paris and London this
+change of title made a good deal more impression than
+upon the local Yugoslavs, whose treatment did not vary.
+A decree was printed on January 21, 1921, in the <i>Vedetta</i>,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
+which laid it down that the expulsions ordered by the
+previous Government retained their force, but that
+appeals might be addressed to the Rector of the Interior.
+A deputation was received by this gentleman, and was told
+that the procedure would be so complicated and so
+lengthy that it would not permit any one to return until
+after the elections. These elections had been fixed for
+the end of April, and it seemed as if France and England
+were so blinded by the blessed words "Provisional
+Government" that they could see nothing else. That
+over 2000 arditi, clothed in mufti, had either stayed from
+the d'Annunzian era or been since introduced was surely
+gossip, and how could anyone believe that those men had
+been granted citizenship on the simple declaration of a
+Rieka shopkeeper, or some such person, that the applicant
+worked under him? These declarations, by the way,
+must have refrained from going into details, for there
+was an almost total lack of work&mdash;except in the political
+department of the police. Rieka was to all intents in
+the possession of Italy, and she was learning what that
+meant. The town was like a dead place, shops were only
+open in the morning, and if the shopkeepers had not been
+compelled by the authorities to remove their shutters
+they would have strolled down to the quays where the
+grass was growing&mdash;"but, thank Heaven," cried Grossich,
+"thank Heaven, it is Italian grass!" (If he ever recalls
+that long-distant day, when, as a student, he fought for
+his fellow-Croats, and when, as a young doctor, he was
+an enthusiastic official of the Croat Club at Castua near
+Rieka, perhaps this gentleman thanks his God for having
+led him to Rieka and turned him into an Italian.) Cut
+off from its Yugoslav hinterland the population of Rieka,
+which consisted more and more of arditi and fascisti, less
+and less of Yugoslavs, the population had nothing to
+do save to speculate in the rate of exchange (but not in
+the local notes which no one wanted) and to prepare for
+the elections. Thus, with time very heavy on their hands,
+there was a great deal of corruption; cocaine could be
+obtained at nearly all the caf&eacute;s. The elections drew
+nearer, and one wondered whether the Entente was going
+to look at the lists of voters and to inquire how it came
+that many natives of the town were not inscribed. What<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
+was likely to happen if the place was delivered altogether
+to the C.N.I. could be seen when the harbour of
+Baro&#353;, given by the Rapallo Treaty to Yugoslavia, was
+demanded, simply demanded, by the Italian Nationalists;
+those ultra-patriots the fascisti, in Italy and in Rieka,
+when they saw that in the "holocaust city" everything
+was going just as well for them as in the brave days of
+d'Annunzio, persisted loudly in claiming Baro&#353; as an integral
+part of Rieka. The Yugoslavs must be prevented,
+wherever possible, from approaching the Adriatic&mdash;this
+being the furious policy of the Italian capitalists who had
+succeeded in sweeping most of the Italian people off their
+feet. With Baro&#353;, a port of limited possibilities, in the
+hands of the Yugoslavs, it would mean that the adjacent
+Rieka through its Yugoslav commerce would prosper;
+but anything that savoured of a Yugoslav Rieka was
+obnoxious to the capitalists and their wild followers,
+since they feared that in the first place it would raise a
+grievous obstacle to their penetration of the Balkans, and
+secondly it would involve the ruin of Triest, where German
+capital still plays a predominant part. So in their folly
+they strenuously fought for the Germans, spurred on by
+the terrible thought that Rieka might become predominantly
+Yugoslav. They refused to listen to their
+wiser men, who pointed out that the possession of an odd
+town or island was to Italy of not so much importance as
+friendship with their Slav neighbours. When, at the
+beginning of April 1921 a large sailing boat, the <i>Rad</i>
+(Captain Vlaho Grubi&#353;i&#263;) came into Baro&#353;, the first ship
+to bring the Yugoslav flag to that port, there was intense
+commotion among the fascisti. Forty of them with
+weapons ran down to the harbour, but Grubi&#353;i&#263; told them
+that he saw no reason why he should not fly the flag of
+his State. A number of workmen, Italians and Yugoslavs,
+then appeared and made common cause against the
+fascisti, so that the latter withdrew. And the captain
+of the Italian warship <i>Carlo Mirabello</i> sent to ask Grubi&#353;i&#263;
+if he had removed the flag. On hearing that he had not
+done so the captain said that he had acted perfectly
+correctly. It seems to be too much to hope that such
+honourable Italians as this captain and these workmen
+will be able, without certain measures on the part of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
+France and England, to prevail over those elements
+who have dragged Rieka down to death and to dishonour.</p>
+
+<p>At last, on April 25, the elections were held. There
+were two parties, that of the C.N.I., swollen with arditi
+and fascisti, who would have nothing to do with the
+Treaty of Rapallo&mdash;their programme consisted in annexation
+to Italy&mdash;and the other party, whose object was to
+carry out the provisions of the Treaty. Professor Zanella
+was its chief. There did not seem to be much hope that
+it would be successful, although it contained what was
+left of the Autonomists, who in 1919 were the largest
+party&mdash;desiring that the town should be neither Yugoslav
+nor Italian&mdash;and these Autonomists were now reinforced
+by the Yugoslavs. But so numerous had been the
+expulsions that many of the survivors feared that it
+would be futile to vote, and on the other hand the Annexionist
+party was quite confident that it would win.
+During the afternoon of the election day, however, they
+perceived that the impossible was happening, and that
+Zanella was marching to victory. Thereupon the enraged
+fascisti had recourse to violence. "Zanella's victory was
+intolerable to these patriots," said <i>La Nazione</i>,<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> "because
+they remembered the two years of tenacity and of splendid
+Italian spirit and of suffering which the town had lived
+through." Most of the electors remembered the suffering.
+The fascisti seized a number of urns and made a bonfire
+of them; there was presented the spectacle of Signor
+Gigante, d'Annunzio's obedient mayor, bursting with
+armed companions into that room of the Palace of Justice
+where the votes were being scrutinized. "I yield to
+violence," said the presiding official; and twenty minutes
+afterwards the contents of the urns were burning merrily.
+But these measures did not help the cause of the fascisti,
+no more than did their screams that they had been
+betrayed. And if Zanella had to fly from Rieka because,
+as the Nationalist paper put it, he could not stand up
+against the vehement indignation of so many of the
+citizens, yet he and his party have triumphed. "Fiume
+or Death," used to be the device dear to d'Annunzio.
+He placarded the long-suffering walls with it, and it was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>on the lapels of the coats of his adherents. "Fiume must
+belong to Italy or be blown up," cried the poet. But,
+strange to say, a majority of the inhabitants prefer that
+their town should continue to exist, and this it can only
+do if, in accordance with the Treaty of Rapallo, it becomes
+a neutral State on friendly terms with both its neighbours,
+Italy and Yugoslavia. The Italian Government desires,
+of course, to execute its Treaty obligations,<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> and if it finds
+too painful the task of moderating the ardours of its own
+super-patriots, it will no doubt be glad to have this done by
+an International force. That method, which was only
+prevented by d'Annunzio's arrival in 1919, offers the
+speediest and most efficacious solution of Rieka's troubles.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE STRICKEN TOWN</p>
+
+<p>If anyone imagined that they would be ended with
+the installation of Zanella he was wrong. At the municipal
+elections 90 per cent. voted for the Autonomist
+party, the Yugoslavs having had the good sense to join
+them. But the Italian Nationalists were not going to
+yield to moderation, and immediately after the elections
+Zanella was obliged to flee for his life, so that he was
+not installed in office until October 5. He struggled
+manfully to clear away the chaos and to make such
+economic arrangements as would eventually convert
+Rieka into a prosperous port. This the fascisti of Triest
+and Venice could by no means tolerate, and on January 31
+an unsuccessful attempt was made by them on his life
+as he was leaving the Constituent Assembly. On February
+16 the Anai (Assoziazione Nazionale fra gli Arditi
+d'Italia) sent out a very urgent message from their headquarters
+in the Via Macchiavelli in Triest. They informed
+the subsections that not only was Zanella preparing
+to deliver Rieka to the Croats, but that the army of
+the "globe-trotter" Wrangel was waiting in Su&#353;ak to
+seize the wretched town. Therefore Gabriele d'Annunzio
+had commanded that every loyal servant of the cause
+was to be mobilized. And after a few rhetorical sentences
+it continued, "I will give the marching orders by telegram
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>as follows: 'Send the documents. Farina.' If only
+a small number of people are needed I will telegraph,
+'Send ... Quintal. Farina.'" The men were to
+assemble at the Italian Labour Bureau, 9 Via Pozza
+Bianca in Triest. They were to be clad in mufti, to be
+armed so far as it was possible and to have with them
+three days' provender.... The subsections are asked
+to telegraph the approximate number of those on whom
+they can rely. And this memorandum should be acknowledged.
+It is signed, "With brotherly greetings. Farina
+Salvatore." About ten days later&mdash;between February 26
+and 28&mdash;there was a meeting at the Hotel Imperial in
+Vienna, under the presidency of Vilim Stipeti&#263;, formerly
+a major of the Austrian General Staff. Some dissident
+Croats&mdash;among them Dr. Emanuel Gagliardi, Captains
+Cankl and Petri&#269;evi&#263;, Gjuro Kli&#353;uri&#263;, Josip Boldin and
+Major-General I&#353;tvanovi&#263;&mdash;two dissident Montenegrins,
+Jovo Plamenac and Marko Petrovi&#263;, together with two
+Italian officers, adherents of d'Annunzio, Colonel Finzi
+of Triest and Major Ventura of Rome, ... assembled
+for the purpose of stirring up trouble for the Yugoslavs
+in the spring. They referred with pleasure to the presence
+of sundry Bulgarian komitadjis in Albania, Finzi declared
+that the Italian Government would satisfy the Croats
+and give them Rieka as soon as Croatia had achieved
+her independence and a less visionary promise was made
+of disturbances in Rieka. On March 1 the two Italian
+officers left for Triest and on March 3 Rieka was confronted
+with another <i>coup d'&eacute;tat</i>. The fascisti of Triest
+and of Gulia Venetia descended on the town in two
+special trains of the Italian State Railway. They had
+not the slightest confidence in Zanella, who was an honest
+man, working on the basis of the Treaty of Rapallo,
+whereby Italy and Yugoslavia recognized the Free State
+of Rieka. In their eyes it was a monstrous thing that
+Italy should be expected to observe this instrument.
+So let the town be freed, let Zanella be expelled. And
+as he only had at his disposal a force of about three
+hundred local gendarmes, with rifles but without munition,
+it was not particularly difficult for the fascisti heroes to
+accomplish their task. Zanella had to fly once more.</p>
+
+<p>"If Italy were to offend against the freedom and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
+independence of the State of Rieka she would deprive
+herself," said Signor Schanzer, the Italian Foreign Secretary
+"she would deprive herself of the name of a Great
+Power and in the Society of Nations she would retain
+no authority." Thus did the successor of the relentless
+but unavailing della Torretta try, with eloquent and
+noble words, to wipe the blot from Italy's scutcheon.
+She could scarcely have the nations coming to the Congress
+of Genoa, there to debate with regard to the economic
+re-establishment of Europe, while her own conduct was
+so very much under suspicion. It would have been
+rather curious, so the <i>Zagreber Tagblatt</i><a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> pointed out,
+for a robber to invite you to his house with a view to
+taking steps against robbery. Something drastic had
+to be done, so that Europe would not look askance at
+the Italian Government. Zanella, it was true, had been
+thrown out&mdash;but why should not the world be told that
+this had been effected by the people of the town? A
+very excellent idea! And so a certain Lieut. Cabruna
+of the <i>gendarmerie</i> made a plan to get together the
+Constituent Assembly and then&mdash;well, there are always
+methods by which resolutions can be passed. Perhaps
+it would not even be necessary for a single rifle to be
+fired at the deputies from the Distinguished Strangers'
+Gallery. But most of the deputies succeeded in escaping
+from the town, although frantic efforts were made to
+prevent them. Out of the threescore only thirteen poor
+devils were held fast and came to the futile meeting.
+The others, with Zanella, assembled on Yugoslav territory
+at a place called Saint Anna.</p>
+
+<p>And Signor Schanzer went on talking. Officers and
+men of the Italian army and navy, said he, had shown
+perfect discipline. Signor Schanzer may not be an
+expert on discipline, but as a humorist he wins applause.
+One's ordinary notions of discipline do not include the
+seizure of a warship by a handful of bandits, the cannons
+of the vessel being afterwards directed against the Government
+palace of a neutral State. The fascisti, with the
+help of Italian troops and accompanied by several
+Italian deputies, eject the legal Government of Rieka.
+One of these deputies, Giuratti, is chosen by his friends
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>to be President of the Free State&mdash;Giuratti of the fascisti,
+Giuratti who most barbarically had ill-treated the Istrian
+Slavs, but&mdash;for we will be just&mdash;this was when he believed
+they were barbarians, savages, quite common, brutal
+men; well, he had learned, he wrote,<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> that this was not
+the case, they had adopted Western culture, they had
+raised the revolutionary flag against the dynasty of
+Karageorgevi&#263; and if Yugoslavia's dismemberment
+should ever come to pass, "then, as I confidently hope,"
+said he, "the Croats with their righteous national aspirations
+will unite with their great neighbour Italy. We
+salute the Croat Revolution with sincerest sympathy..."
+and so on and so on. That was the kind of calm, impartial
+personage to have as Governor of the distracted Free
+State, where in one point anyhow most of the population
+think the same, and that is that their union with Italy
+would be an absolute disaster. Behold this Giuratti
+posing his candidature, Giuratti whose patriotism and
+idealism are, says the Italian Government, fully appreciated
+by them; nevertheless it has advised him to
+refuse the suggested honour. That he should be punished
+did not occur to them; but what would they have said
+if a Yugoslav&mdash;surely with more right than an Italian
+and certainly with a larger following of townsfolk&mdash;had
+been selected as President? "The proceedings of the
+Italian Government," said Schanzer, "are clear, speedy
+and determined." But did anything unpleasant happen
+to Commandant Castelli, an officer sent to make order,
+when he quite openly placed himself on the side of the
+fascisti? Would degradation be the lot of any officer
+or soldier who "mutinied" and joined the fascisti?...
+Apparently it was due to the unhappy political condition
+of Europe that the whole civilized world did not launch
+an indignant protest against the baseness and cynicism
+of the Italians. But how utterly they failed to persuade
+others that the wishes of Rieka were as they represented
+them! Rieka desires to remain independent and this
+desire the Italians will have to respect. And the later
+they make up their mind to keep their promises, so much
+the worse for them. The Yugoslavs can wait, for theirs
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>is the future. A cartoonist in the Belgrade <i>Vreme</i> depicted
+a rough old Serbian warrior holding on his open hand a
+very neat little Italian soldier. "Now listen to me,"
+he was saying, "and I will tell you a story. Once upon
+a time there was a country called Austria...."</p>
+
+<p>There was a characteristic little affair at Saint Anna
+on March 23. A few minutes after Zanella had left the
+Lubi&#263; Inn a suspicious-looking person appeared. He
+began observing the customers and their surroundings,
+when the Police-Commissary Per&#353;i&#263; came up to him and
+asked for his passport. "Take yourself off!" shouted
+the intruder, as he pulled a bomb out of his trouser
+pocket. Per&#353;i&#263; grappled with him and soon overpowered
+him. And outside the house four other fascisti, Armano
+Viola, Carpinelli, Bellia and Murolo, were captured.
+They claimed to be journalists, and it is quite true that
+Viola is on the staff of the notorious <i>Vedetta Italiana</i>;
+but when he comes into a foreign country as a special
+correspondent and is teaching others how to go about
+that business&mdash;for until then they had been otherwise
+engaged, Murolo being charged with numerous thefts
+and attempted murders, while Bellia and Carpinelli
+were accused of breaking into the Abbazia Casino&mdash;if
+Viola was teaching them how to be journalists he would
+on this occasion have been better advised if he had restricted
+them to the conventional tools of the profession
+instead of bombs, revolvers and daggers. Little use
+did they get out of them, for a trio of these armed individuals
+were seized and disarmed by one Yugoslav
+gendarme, who was himself very meagrely equipped.
+With tears in their eyes they begged for mercy. "Piet&agrave;,
+Piet&agrave;!" they exclaimed. So long as their own lives
+were spared they were very willing to forgo the 60,000
+lire which had been put on Zanella's head.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately it seems obvious that this exploit, if
+not ordered by the Italian Government was, at any rate,
+permitted by them. How otherwise could the automobile
+containing these men have got past the sentries
+at the Su&#353;ak bridge and two other Italian sentry posts?
+Moreover, these men were in possession of documents
+which proved that official Italian circles at Rieka were
+privy to their undertaking, and that they proposed to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
+investigate the Yugoslav military positions on the frontier....
+These five fascisti brigands&mdash;who were also
+lieutenants of the Italian army&mdash;would therefore have
+to be tried not only for attempted murder but for
+attempted espionage. They were put into a train and
+transported to the prison at Zagreb. "If once we begin
+to march," so the Italian soldiers at Rieka had over
+and over again been telling the Croats, "then we shall
+not halt before we come to Zagreb, your capital." Those
+five will perhaps some day explain to their comrades how
+quickly Zagreb can be reached.... As yet those whom
+they left behind them had not lost their bombast: a
+manifesto was issued by them which declared that five
+true patriots had sallied forth to Saint Anna, for the
+purpose of parleying with the Constituent Assembly,
+and that in a barbarous fashion they had been arrested,
+maltreated and possibly killed. Let the people avenge
+the shedding of such noble blood. Everything, everything
+must be done in order to liberate the captured
+brethren. And so, towards eleven at night, about sixty
+fascisti and legionaries came together. Armed to the
+teeth, they designed to cross over into Yugoslav territory,
+but when they noticed that the sentry posts had been
+strengthened they went home to bed.</p>
+
+<p>A number of American and European journalists
+rushed out to Belgrade, under the impression that the
+Yugoslav-Italian War could now no longer be avoided.
+But they did not realize how great a self-control the
+Yugoslavs possess. It may be, as a commentator put
+it in the <i>Nation</i>,<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> that Italy "is practically at war with
+Yugoslavia," for she is obsessed by the "Pan-Slav
+menace"; but if they insist on the arbitrament of arms
+they will have to wait until the Yugoslavs have time to
+deal with them.... The Free State of Rieka owes its
+existence to a Treaty between Italy and Yugoslavia;
+both of them should therefore guarantee its freedom.
+Italian and Yugoslav <i>gendarmerie</i> and troops should
+resist together the incursions of fascisti; and if the two
+races cannot work in harmony, then let the administration
+of the town be entrusted to neutral troops; and as
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>High Commissioner one would suggest Mr. Blakeney,
+the British Consul at Belgrade. If this imperturbable
+and most kindly man were to fail in the attempt at
+repeating in Rieka what has been accomplished in Danzig,
+then, indeed, one might despair; but he would brilliantly
+and placidly succeed. All the other qualifications are
+his; an intimate knowledge of every Near Eastern
+language&mdash;and, of course, Italian; a perfect acquaintance
+with the mentality of all those peoples; common sense
+of an uncommon order, and the whole-hearted confidence
+of those with whom he comes into contact. Great
+Britain and France compelled the Yugoslavs, at enormous
+sacrifices, to sign the Treaty of Rapallo; they are, therefore,
+morally obliged to see that it is executed. For too
+many months the Italians were saying that they would
+carry out their part of it and leave the third zone in
+Dalmatia if the Yugoslavs would agree to a few more
+concessions, commercial and territorial, that were not
+in the Treaty. During the Genoa Conference in the spring
+of 1922 the Italian authorities confessed to the Yugoslav
+delegates that their hands were bound by the fascisti.
+These elements would certainly object to the execution
+of that part of the Treaty of Rapallo which refers to the
+port of Baro&#353;. Accurately speaking, the arrangements
+with regard to Baro&#353; are embodied in a letter from Count
+Sforza, the then Foreign Secretary, and are added to the
+Treaty as an appendix. Both were signed on the same
+day, and apparently this plan of an appendix was adopted
+on account of the fascisti. Yet if Count Sforza had not
+signed that letter it is safe to say that the Yugoslavs
+would not have signed the main body of a Treaty which
+to them was the reverse of favourable. And at Genoa
+the Italians started haggling about a strip of land near
+Baro&#353;, in the hope that some success would stay the zeal
+of the fascisti. Furthermore they pleaded that Zadar
+could not live if Yugoslavia did not, in addition to supplying
+it with water, give it railway communication with
+the interior. The Yugoslavs were thus invited to construct
+at great expense a railway to a foreign town which
+their own &#352;ibenik and other Adriatic towns did not
+possess. This, naturally, they refused to undertake,
+as also to agree to the Italian suggestion that a free<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
+zone of some twenty kilometres should be instituted at
+the back of Zadar. One might safely say that the Italian
+agents in this region would not have confined themselves
+to salutary measures for the welfare of the town. It is
+stated in the Treaty of Rapallo that in case of disagreement
+either party could invoke an arbitrator, and the
+Yugoslavs, who happen now to be the weaker party,
+have been contemplating application to the League of
+Nations. Well, in Genoa it was proposed by Italy that
+Yugoslavia should renounce the clause which deals with
+an eventual arbitration. If you make a large number of
+demands&mdash;never mind that they should be in opposition
+to a Treaty you have signed&mdash;then you may gain a few
+of them&mdash;and Italy was hoping that the Free State
+would repay the costs which she incurred there on account
+of her unruly son d'Annunzio, and, likewise, that the good
+Italianists who at the end of the Great War committed
+wholesale thefts from the State warehouses should not
+be made to pay for it. With all their guile and strength
+the Italians were endeavouring to avoid the execution
+of her Treaty of Rapallo. "Italy is the one Power in
+Europe," says Mr. Harold Goad<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> who thrusts himself
+upon our notice, "Italy is the one Power in Europe
+that is most obviously and most consistently working
+for peace and conciliation in every field."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">HOPES IN THE LITTLE ENTENTE</p>
+
+<p>The complicated troubles, avoidable and unavoidable,
+that have been raging in Central Europe after the War are
+being met to some extent by the Little Entente, an
+association in the first place between Yugoslavia and the
+kindred Czecho-Slovakia, and afterwards between them
+and Roumania. The world was assured that this union
+had for its object the establishment of peace, security
+and normal economic activities in Central and Eastern
+Europe; no acquisitive purposes were in the background,
+and since these three States now recognized that if
+they try to swallow more of the late Austro-Hungarian
+monarchy they will suffer from chronic indigestion, we
+need not be suspicious of their altruism. It is perfectly
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>true that the first impulse which moved the creators of
+the Little Entente was not constructive but defensive;
+their great Allies did not appear, in the opinion of the
+three Succession States, to be taking the necessary precautions
+against the elements of reaction. Otherwise
+they, especially France (which was naturally more determined
+that Austria should not join herself to Germany),
+would not have favoured the idea of a Danubian Federation,
+in which Austria and Hungary would play leading
+parts. The Great Powers would also, if they had been
+less exclusively concerned with their own interests, have
+handled with more resolution the attempts of Charles of
+Habsburg to place himself at the head of the present
+reactionary r&eacute;gime at Buda-Pest; and if it had not
+been for certain energetic measures taken by the members
+of the Little Entente it may well be doubted whether
+the Government of Admiral Horthy, which does not
+conceal the fact that it is royalist&mdash;the king being temporarily
+absent&mdash;would have required Charles to leave
+the country. The Little Entente pointed out to their
+great Allies what these had apparently overlooked,
+namely, that the return of the Habsburgs was not opposed
+by the Succession States out of pure malice but for the
+reason that it would inevitably strengthen the magnates
+and the high ecclesiastics in their desire to bring about the
+restoration of Hungary's old frontiers. As the frontiers
+are now drawn there dwell&mdash;and this could not be prevented&mdash;a
+number of Magyars in each of the three neighbouring
+States (the fewest being in Yugoslavia), just as
+the present Hungary includes a Czech-Slovak, Roumanian
+and Yugoslav population.<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> But the Great Powers agree
+that if this frontier is to be changed at all, every precaution
+should be taken against having it changed by
+force. It is no exaggeration to say that there can be no
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>real peace in Central Europe until normal intercourse
+with Russia is re-established, but let it in the meantime
+be the task of the Little Entente to guard the temporary
+peace from being shattered.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from this defensive object the countries of the
+Little Entente have the positive aim of a resumption of
+normal economic conditions and the institution of a new
+order of things in accordance with the new political
+construction of Central and Eastern Europe. It is obvious
+that these three States have numerous interests in common
+which make their co-operation very natural, if not indeed
+indispensable.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> April 16, 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> January 22, 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> According to the Rome correspondent of the <i>Petit Journal</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> But the wind was considerably tempered for him: vessels laden
+with his precise requirements sailed over from Italy and said they had
+been captured by d'Annunzio's arditi. General Badoglio, in command of
+the royal troops outside the town, ascertained in November 1919 that
+Rieka's coal-supply was nearly exhausted and 7000 tons per month were
+required for the public services alone. He accordingly informed a
+syndicate of coal merchants in Triest that he would be personally responsible
+for the first consignment of coal to d'Annunzio. A month earlier,
+when the town was supposed to be blockaded, it was announced that a
+limited supply of food-stuffs would, nevertheless, be introduced, through
+the Red Cross, for very young children. This amounted, as a matter of
+fact, to 21 truckloads a week. It is significant that there was no rise
+in the prices charged in the public restaurants of Rieka, and that persons
+living outside the line of Armistice found it cheaper to do their shopping
+in the besieged city.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> February 20, 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> September 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> However, in the Yugoslav Parliament, although some of the
+deputies have spent their lives in far-off, primitive places&mdash;by no means
+all of those who represent the Albanians can read and write&mdash;one does
+not hear such deplorable language as that which, according to the <i>Grazer
+Volksblatt</i> of January 19, 1922, disgraced the Austrian Assembly. A
+certain Dr. Waneck, of the Pan-German party, wished to criticize the
+Minister of Finance, Professor Dr. G&uuml;rtler of the Christian Socialists.
+He remarked that one could not expect this Minister to be sober at four
+o'clock in the afternoon, and went on to say that no less than five banks,
+whose names he would give, had received early information from the
+Minister, which enabled them to speculate successfully. He repeated
+this accusation several times and with great violence, but when he was
+invited to reveal the names of these banks&mdash;"No, sir!" he cried. "I
+will not do so, because I don't want to."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> Cf. "The Tri-Une Kingdom," by Pavle Popovi&#263; and Jovan M.
+Jovanovi&#263;, in the <i>Quarterly Review</i>, October 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> He was kept for some time in confinement at Mitrovica, in Syrmia, and
+in November 1920 he was liberated in consequence of the great amnesty.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> Cf. <i>Spectator</i>, July 17, 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> Cf. <i>Edinburgh Review</i>, July 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> A few months after this, in the course of a little controversy in the
+<i>Saturday Review</i> (which arose from an unsigned and, I hoped, rather
+reasonable article of mine on the Adriatic Settlement) I quoted from
+memory this passage of Mrs. Re-Bartlett's and said that the Italian
+captain was giving chocolates to the children at Kievo. Thereupon Mr.
+Harold W.&nbsp;E. Goad of the British-Italian League wrote a highly indignant
+letter to the editor, and in the course of it he denounced me for having
+egregiously invented the chocolates "for the sole purpose of throwing
+her testimony into ridicule.... What do you, Sir, think of such methods
+as that?" And he concluded by declaring that I wallowed in a "truly
+Balkan slough of distortion and calumny." Well, on referring to Mrs.
+Re-Bartlett's article I find that there is no mention of chocolates, and I
+apologize; presumably the children were crowding round their adored
+<i>Capitano</i> in order to thank him for the bridges and waterworks which
+were being built in Dalmatia.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> During the Italian occupation, said Professor Salvemini, teachers,
+doctors and priests were deported or expelled from the country, while
+the Italian Government had to dissolve 30 municipal councils out of
+33, so that at the head of the communes were Italian officials and
+not properly elected mayors. Moreover, all liberties were suppressed.
+No Slav newspapers, no Slav societies were permitted, and 32 out of
+57 magistrates were dismissed&mdash;these methods being due not to cruelty
+or folly, said the Professor, but to the necessity of keeping order by
+forcible means in a country which was wholly hostile.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> November 13, 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> November 15, 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> This, of course, did not meet with the approval of Signor d'Annunzio.
+He made numerous pronouncements with regard to his inflexible desires,
+saying that, if necessary, he would offer up his bleeding corpse. And
+his resistance to the Italian Government did not confine itself to rhetoric.
+During his usurpation of Rieka this man had done his country grievous
+harm. It was not only that he held her up to the smiles of the malicious
+who said that she could not keep order in her own house, but he was
+guiding the people back to barbarism. When sailors of the royal navy
+deserted to his standard, he knelt before them in the streets of Rieka at
+a time when from Russia Lenin was inciting the Italian Communists to
+revolution and to the conquest of the State. He refused to deal with
+Giolitti, even as he had rejected the advances of Nitti. But the aged
+Giolitti grasped the problem with more firmness, which was what one
+might expect from the statesman who, after his return to power, had
+leaned neither on the industrial magnates of Milan nor on their Bol&#353;evik
+antagonists. Giolitti was resolved to put an end to the nuisance of
+d'Annunzio; in no constitutional State is there room for a Prime Minister
+and such a swashbuckler. The Nationalists of Italy were furious when
+they perceived that the Premier was in earnest and that force would be
+employed against their idol. And it had to come to that, for the utterly
+misguided man continued to resist&mdash;hoping doubtless for wholesale
+desertions in the army and navy&mdash;with the deplorable result that a good
+many Italians were slain by Italians. Orders were issued by the Government
+that all possible care should be taken of d'Annunzio's person; and
+eventually when Rieka was taken by the royalist troops the poet broke
+his oath that he would surely die; he announced that Italy was not
+worth dying for and it was said that he had sailed away on an aeroplane.
+He had accomplished none of his desires; the town had not become
+Italian, though he had bathed it in Italian blood. His overweening
+personal ambitions had been shipwrecked on the rock of ridicule, for as
+he made his inglorious exit he shouted at the world that he was "still
+alive and inexorable." But yet he may have unconsciously achieved
+something, for his seizure of what he loved to call the "holocaust city"
+provided the extreme Nationalists with a private stage where&mdash;in uniforms
+of their own design, in cloaks and feathers and flowing black ties and
+with eccentric arrangements of the hair&mdash;they could strut and caper
+and fling bombastic insults at the authorities in Rome, until the Government
+found it opportune to take them in hand. The greatest Italian
+poet and one of the greatest imaginative writers in Europe will now be
+able to devote himself&mdash;if his rather morbid Muse has suffered no injury&mdash;to
+his predestined task. Those&mdash;the comparatively few that read&mdash;whose
+acquaintance with this writer's work usually caused them to regret
+his methods, could not help admiring his personal activities, his genius
+for leadership and his vital fire during the War. But, once this was over,
+he relapsed; and expressing himself very clearly in action, so that he
+became known to the many instead of the few, he lived what he previously
+wrote, and now it is generally recognized that Gabriel of the Annunciation,
+as he calls himself, who produced a row of obscene and histrionic
+novels, is a mountebank, a self-deceiver and a most affected bore. When
+he came to Rieka he thought fit to appeal to the England of Milton.
+And, like him, Milton lived as he wrote. Milton, Dante and Sophocles&mdash;to
+mention no others of the supreme writers&mdash;were as serious and responsible
+in their public actions as in the pursuit of their art.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> Whatever be the limitations of the <i>Dom</i> as a newspaper&mdash;it is almost
+exclusively occupied with the person and programme of Mr. Radi&#263;&mdash;yet
+that brings with it the virtue, most exceptional in Yugoslavia, of refusing
+to engage in polemics. This would otherwise take up a good deal of its
+space, as Radi&#263; has become such a bogey-man that nothing is too ridiculous
+for his opponents to believe. A Czech newspaper not long ago informed
+the world that this monstrous personage had told an interviewer that not
+only had Serbian soldiers in Macedonia been murdering 200 children but
+that they had roasted and consumed them. Furthermore Radi&#263; had
+said that the British Minister to Yugoslavia had called upon him and
+had asked his advice with some persistence, not even wishing to leave
+Radi&#263; time to reflect, as to whether the Prince-Regent should rule in
+Russia, while an English Prince should be invited to occupy the Yugoslav
+throne. The first of these remarks proved conclusively, said a
+number of Belgrade papers, that Radi&#263; was a knave and by the second
+he had demonstrated that he was an imbecile. And my friend Mr.
+Leiper of the <i>Morning Post</i> speculated as to whether he was more likely
+to end his days in a lunatic asylum or a prison. But Radi&#263; was caring
+about none of these things; his birthday happened at about this time
+and some 30,000 of his adherents came to do him honour at his birthplace,
+over 500 of them on decorated horses having met him at Sisak
+station the previous evening. When I asked him what he had to say
+about the two afore-mentioned remarks he gave me an amusing account
+of how the interviewer had appreciated the various samples of wine
+which he (Radi&#263;) had just brought down from his vineyard. The conversation
+lasted for about four hours, and in the course of it Radi&#263; mentioned
+that a certain Moslem deputy from Novi Bazar, irritated by
+the fact that Mr. Dra&#353;kovi&#263;, Minister of the Interior, found no pleasure
+in his continued presence on a commission of inquiry in the region of
+Kossovo, had been throwing out very dark hints about a child which
+he accused the Serbs of killing in the stormy days of 1878, and then
+relating to the Tsar that this dastardly deed had been committed by the
+Turks. This was the basis of that part of the interview. As for the
+other absurdity, it was mentioned that some courtiers had told the
+Prince-Regent that he alone could establish an orderly Government in
+Russia, whereupon Radi&#263; observed that England and France were not
+likely to allow one person to reign both there and in Yugoslavia. And
+when I asked why he had not published this explanation in his paper,
+he said that he couldn't very well charge a guest with having liked his
+wine too much.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> Cf. <i>The Quarterly Review</i> (October 1921), in which Messrs. Pavle
+Popovi&#263; and Jovan M. Jovanovi&#263; published a very able survey of Yugoslav
+conditions.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> Cf. <i>Nineteenth Century and After</i>, January 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> April 26, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Unhappily it became apparent that the Italians were not disposed
+to have the Treaty put in force</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> March 23, 1922.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> Cf. an article in a fascisti newspaper, quoted by the <i>Zagreber Tagblatt</i>
+of May 14, 1922.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Cf. "The Rise of the Little Entente," by Dorothy Thompson. April 1,
+1922.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> <i>Fortnightly Review</i>, May 1922.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> The magnates of Hungary and their friends do not grow weary of
+lamenting the sad fate of the Magyar minorities. Whatever may be
+happening in Transylvania, they have a very poor case against the Serbs.
+In the Voivodina there are, according to Hungarian statistics, about
+382,000 Magyars out of 1&middot;4 million inhabitants. These Magyars have
+their primary and secondary schools, their newspapers and so forth,
+whereas in the spring of 1922 the schools in various Serbian villages
+near Budapest were forcibly closed, the lady teachers being told that
+if they stayed they would have to undergo the physical examination
+which is applied to prostitutes.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr />
+<h2><a name="VIII" id="VIII"></a>VIII<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></h2>
+
+<h3>YUGOSLAVIA'S FRONTIERS</h3>
+
+<p class="subtitle"><span class="smcap">Introduction</span>&mdash;(<i>a</i>) <span class="smcap">The Albanian Frontier</span>: 1. <span class="smcap">The Actors</span>&mdash;2. <span class="smcap">The
+audience rush the stage</span>&mdash;3. <span class="smcap">Serbs, Albanians and the Mischief-makers</span>&mdash;4.
+<span class="smcap">The State of Albanian culture</span>&mdash;5. <span class="smcap">A method
+which might have been tried in Albania</span>&mdash;6. <span class="smcap">The attraction
+of Yugoslavia</span>&mdash;7. <span class="smcap">Religious and other matters in the border
+region</span>&mdash;8. <span class="smcap">A digression on two rival Albanian authorities</span>&mdash;9.
+<span class="smcap">What faces the Yugoslavs</span>&mdash;10. <span class="smcap">Dr. Trumbi&#263;'s proposal</span>&mdash;11.
+<span class="smcap">The position in 1921: The Tirana Government and the
+Mirditi</span>&mdash;12. <span class="smcap">Serbia's good influence</span>&mdash;13. <span class="smcap">European measures
+against the Yugoslavs and their friends</span>&mdash;14. <span class="smcap">The region
+from which the Yugoslavs have retired</span>&mdash;15. <span class="smcap">The prospect</span>&mdash;(<i>b</i>)
+<span class="smcap">The Greek frontier</span>&mdash;(<i>c</i>) <span class="smcap">The Bulgarian frontier</span>&mdash;(<i>d</i>) <span class="smcap">The
+Roumanian frontier</span>: 1. <span class="smcap">The state of the Roumanians in
+eastern Serbia</span>&mdash;2. <span class="smcap">The Banat</span>&mdash;(<i>e</i>) <span class="smcap">The Hungarian frontier</span>&mdash;(<i>f</i>)
+<span class="smcap">The Austrian frontier</span>&mdash;(<i>g</i>) <span class="smcap">The Italian frontier</span>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">INTRODUCTION</p>
+
+<p>Nobody could have expected in the autumn of 1918
+that the frontiers of the new State would be rapidly
+delimitated. Ethnological, economic, historic and
+strategical arguments&mdash;to mention no others&mdash;would be
+brought forward by either side, and the Supreme Council,
+which had to deliver judgment on these knotty problems,
+would be often more preoccupied with their own interests
+and their relation to each other. It would also happen
+that a member of the Supreme Council would be simultaneously
+judge and pleader. The mills of justice would
+therefore grind very slowly, for they would be conscious
+that the fruit of their efforts, evolved with much foreign
+material clogging the machinery and with parts of the
+machinery jerked out of their line of track, would be
+received with acute criticism. When more than two
+years had elapsed from the time of the Armistice a considerable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
+part of Yugoslavia's frontiers remained undecided.
+We will travel along the frontier lines, starting
+with that between Yugoslavs and Albanians.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">(a) THE ALBANIAN FRONTIER</p>
+
+<p class="section">1. THE ACTORS</p>
+
+<p>Those who in old Turkish days lived in that wild
+border country which is dealt with on these pages would
+have been surprised to hear that they would be the objects
+of a great deal of discussion in the west of Europe. But
+in those days there was no Yugoslavia and no Albania
+and no League of Nations, and very few were the writers
+who took up this question. It is, undoubtedly, a question
+of importance, though some of these writers, remembering
+that the fate of the world was dependent on the fraction
+of an inch of Cleopatra's nose, seem almost to have
+imagined that it was proportionately more dependent on
+those several hundred kilometres of disputed frontier.
+It would not so much matter that they have introduced
+a good deal of passion into their arguments if they had
+not also exerted some influence on influential men&mdash;and
+this compels one to pay them what would otherwise be
+excessive attention.</p>
+
+<p>Let us consider the frontier which the Ambassadors'
+Conference in November 1921 assigned to Yugoslavia and
+the Albanians. We have already mentioned some of
+the previous points of contact between those Balkan
+neighbours who for centuries have been acquiring knowledge
+of each other and who, therefore, as Berati Bey,
+the Albanian delegate in Paris, very wisely said, should
+have been left to manage their own frontier question. A
+number of Western Europeans will exclaim that this
+could not be accomplished without the shedding of blood;
+but it is rather more than probable that the interference
+of Western Europe&mdash;partly philanthropic and partly
+otherwise&mdash;will be responsible for greater loss of life.
+If it could not be permitted that two of the less powerful
+peoples should attempt to settle their own affairs, then,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
+at any rate, the most competent of alien judges should
+have sat on the tribunal. A frontier in that part of
+Europe should primarily take the peculiarities of the
+people into account, and I believe that if Sir Charles Eliot
+and Baron Nopsca with their unrivalled knowledge of the
+Albanians had been consulted it is probable they would,
+for some years to come, have thought desirable the frontier
+which is preferred by General Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey, by a
+majority of the local Albanians, and by those who hope
+for peace in the Balkans.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">2. THE AUDIENCE RUSH THE STAGE</p>
+
+<p>A battle which took place near Tuzi, not far from
+Podgorica, in December 1919, may assist the study of
+the difficult Albanian question. At the first attack
+about 150 Montenegrins, mostly young recruits, were
+killed or wounded; but in the counter-attack the Albanian
+losses were much greater, 167 of them being made
+prisoners. On all of these were found Italian rifles,
+ammunition, money and army rations. On the other
+hand, a few Montenegrins, with three officers, were also
+captured and were stripped and handed over, naked, to
+the Italians. But these declined to have them, saying
+that the conflict had been no concern of theirs, and the
+unfortunate men&mdash;with the exception of one who escaped&mdash;remained
+among the Albanians. The fact that Tuzi
+would be of no value to the Italians neither weakens
+nor strengthens the supposition that they were privy
+to the Albanian attack; but it may very well be that the
+natives had taken their Italian equipment by force of
+arms. It would, anyhow, seem that the Italians have
+little understanding of this people: during the War,
+when General Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey was straightening his
+line, he paid some hundreds of Albanians to maintain
+his western flank, and they were very satisfactory. (It
+troubled them very little whether they were holding it
+against the Austrians or against other Albanians.) When
+Italy took over that part of the line she employed a whole
+Division, which&mdash;to the amusement, it is said, of Franchet
+d'Esp&eacute;rey&mdash;provided the local population with a great<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
+deal of booty, and in particular with mules. There was
+constant trouble in those regions of Albania which were
+occupied by the Italians,<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> and in June 1920 things had
+come to such a pass that the Italian garrisons, after being
+thrown out of the villages of Bestrovo and Selitza, were
+actually retiring with all the stores they could rescue to
+Valona. Their retreat, said Reuter, in a euphemistic
+message from Rome, was "attended by some loss." As
+Valona was their last stronghold in Albanian territory,
+it seemed that very few, if any, of the tribes were in
+favour of an Italian protectorate. And since it was
+calculated that during the first six months of 1920 the
+Italian Government was paying from 400 to 500 million
+lire a month for corn, and the year's deficit might be
+enough to lead the State to the very verge of bankruptcy,
+one was asking whether from an economic, apart from
+any other, point of view, it would not be advisable for
+the Italians to cut their losses in central Albania. And
+this they very wisely determined to do. Would that
+their subsequent policy in northern Albania had been
+as well-inspired.</p>
+
+<p>It would also seem as if the affair of Tuzi shows that
+the Albanians have no wish for a Yugoslav protectorate,
+and there are a good many Serbs, such as Professor
+Cviji&#263;, who view with uneasiness any extension of their
+sway over the Albanians. Many of the tribes are prepared,
+after very small provocation or none, to take up
+arms against anybody; and those who, in the north
+and north-east of the country, are in favour of a Yugoslav
+protectorate would undoubtedly have opposed to them
+a number of the natives, less because they are fired with
+the prospect of "Albania for the Albanians" than on
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>account of their patriarchal views. We must, however,
+at the same time, acknowledge that those Albanians
+who are impelled by patriotic ideals, and who would
+like to see their countrymen within the 1913 frontiers,
+resolutely turn away from the various attractions which
+the Slavs undoubtedly exercise over many of them and
+combine in a brotherly fashion, under the guidance of a
+disinterested State, to work for an independent Albania&mdash;those
+idealists have every right to be heard. Their
+solution is, in fact, the one that would, as we have elsewhere
+said, be best for everyone concerned. The late
+Professor Burrows, who believed in the possibility of such
+an arrangement, thought that it would take generations
+for this people "to pass from blood feud and tribal
+jealousy to the good order of a unified State, unless they
+have tutorage in the art of self-government." There
+seem to be grave difficulties, both external and internal,
+in the way of setting up such a tutorage over the whole
+of the 1913 Albania; and if a majority of the northern
+and north-eastern tribes prefer to turn to Yugoslavia,
+rather than to join the frustrated patriots and the wilder
+brethren in turning away from it, they should not be
+sweepingly condemned as traitors to the national cause.
+The frame of mind which looks with deep suspicion on a
+road that links a tribe to its neighbour is not very promising
+for those who dream of an Albanian nation; it is a
+prevalent and fundamental frame of mind. "The Prince
+of Wied," we are told by his countryman, Dr. Max M&uuml;ller,
+"succeeded in conquering the hearts of those Albanians
+who supported him and of gaining the highest respect
+of those who were his political opponents." No doubt
+they were flattered when they noticed that he had so far
+become an Albanian as to surround his residence at
+Durazzo with barbed-wire entanglements.</p>
+
+<p>Among the solutions of the Albanian problem was that
+which Dr. M&uuml;ller very seriously, not to say ponderously,
+put forward in 1916.<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> This gentleman, with a first-hand
+knowledge of the country, which he gained during
+the War, did not minimize the task which would face
+the Prince of Wied on his return. Of that wooden potentate
+one may say that his work in Albania did not collapse
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>for the reason that it was never started; a few miles
+from Durazzo, his capital, from which, I believe, he
+made only that one excursion whose end was undignified,
+a few miles away he excited the derision of his "subjects,"
+and a few miles farther off they had not heard of him.
+Dr. M&uuml;ller, after reproving us sternly for smiling at the
+national decoration, in several classes, with which his
+Highness on landing at the rickety pier was graciously
+pleased to gladden the meritorious natives, admits that
+at his second coming he will have to take various other
+steps. Austrians and Germans should be brought to
+colonize the country, and not peasants, forsooth, like
+those who have laboriously made good in the Banat,
+but merchants, manufacturers, engineers, doctors, officials
+and large landowners&mdash;not by any means without close
+inquiry, so as to admit only such as are in possession of
+a blameless repute and a certain amount of cash. Dr.
+M&uuml;ller was resolved that, so far as lay with him, none
+but the very best Teutons should embark upon this
+splendid mission. He desired that, after landing, they
+should first of all remain at the harbour, there to undergo
+a course of tuition in the customs and peculiarities of
+the tribe among which they proposed to settle. His
+compatriots would be so tactful&mdash;apparently not criticizing
+any of the customs&mdash;that the hearts of the Albanians
+would incline towards them and by their beautiful
+example they would make these primitive, wild hearts
+beat not so much for local interests but very fervently
+for the Albanian fatherland. One cannot help a feeling
+of regret that circumstances have prevented us from
+seeing Dr. M&uuml;ller's scheme put into action.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">3. SERBS, ALBANIANS AND THE MISCHIEF-MAKERS</p>
+
+<p>In 1913, after the Balkan War, the flags of the Powers
+were hoisted at Scutari, and a frontier dividing the
+Albanians from the Yugoslavs (Montenegrins and Serbs)
+was indicated by Austria and traced at the London
+Conference. This boundary was still awaiting its final
+demarcation by commissioners on the spot when the
+European War broke out. Then in the second year of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
+the War disturbances were organized by the Austrians
+in Albania&mdash;their friend the miscreant ruler of Montenegro
+caused money to be sent for this purpose to the Austro-Hungarian
+Consul at Scutari&mdash;and in April and May of
+that year the Serbs were authorized by their Allies to
+protect themselves by occupying certain portions of the
+country. Various battles took place between those
+Albanians who were partisans of Austria and those who
+were disinclined to attack the Serbs in the rear. The
+Serbian Government opposed the Austrian propaganda
+by dispatching to that region the Montenegrin Pouni&#353;a
+Ra&#269;i&#263;, of whom we have much to say. He was accompanied
+by Smajo Ferovi&#263;, a Moslem sergeant of komitadjis.
+They explained to the Albanians that the Serbs
+had been offered a separate peace with numerous concessions,
+but that Mr. Pa&#353;i&#263; had refused to treat. When
+the two Albanian parties discussed the situation by
+shooting at each other, the Austro-Hungarian officers
+made tracks for Kotor, and that particular intrigue came
+to an end.</p>
+
+<p>When the War was over, the Serbs, sweeping up
+from Macedonia, were requested by General Franchet
+d'Esp&eacute;rey to undertake a task which the Italians refused,
+and push the demoralized Austrian troops out of Albania.
+Some weeks after this had been accomplished, the Italians,
+mindful of the Treaty of London, demanded that a large
+part of Albania should be given up to their administration.
+The Serbs agreed and withdrew; they even took away
+their representative from Scutari, where the Allies had
+again installed themselves. The Treaty of London bestowed
+upon the Serbs a sphere of influence in northern
+Albania, but&mdash;save for a few misguided politicians&mdash;they
+were logical enough to reject the whole of the pernicious
+Treaty, both the clauses which robbed them in Dalmatia
+and those which in Albania gave them stolen goods.
+Over and over again did the Yugoslav delegates declare
+in Paris that it was their wish to see established an
+independent Albania with the frontiers of 1913. These,
+the first frontiers which the Albanians had ever possessed,
+were laid down by Austria with the express purpose of
+thwarting the Serbs and facilitating Albanian raids. It
+is true that several towns with large Albanian majorities<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
+were made over to the Serbs&mdash;very much, as it turned
+out, to their subsequent advantage&mdash;yet, being separated
+from their hinterland, this was a doubtful gift. Nevertheless,
+if a free and united Albania could be constituted
+the Serbs were ready to accept this frontier, and even
+Monsieur Justin Godart, the strenuous French Albanophile
+of whom we speak elsewhere, cannot deny that this
+attitude of the Yugoslavs redounds very much to their
+honour. But before relative tranquillity reigns among
+the Albanians it is, as General Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey perceived
+in 1918, an untenable line. He, therefore, drew a
+temporary frontier which permitted the Serbs to advance
+for some miles into Albania, so that on the river Drin or
+on the mountain summits they might ward off attacks.
+These, by the way, had their origin far more in the border
+population's empty stomachs than in their animus against
+the Slavs. And nobody with knowledge of this people
+could regard the 1918 frontier as unnecessary. The
+Albanians were themselves so much inclined to acquiesce
+that one must ask why, in the months which followed,
+there was a considerable amount of border fighting.
+What was it that caused the Albanians in the region of
+Scutari to make their violent onslaughts of December
+1919 and January 1920, the renewed offensive of July
+1920 at the same places&mdash;after which the Albanian
+Government forwarded to that of Belgrade an assurance
+of goodwill&mdash;and the organized thrust of August 13 against
+Dibra, which was preceded on August 10 by a manifesto
+to the chancelleries of Europe falsely accusing the
+Serbs of having begun these operations, and which was
+followed by the Tirana Government promising to try to
+find the guilty persons? The 19th of the same month
+saw the Albanians delivering a further attack in the
+neighbourhood of Scutari, and then the Yugoslav Government
+decided that their army must occupy such defensive
+positions as would put a stop to these everlasting incidents.
+But a voice was whispering to the Albanians
+that they must not allow themselves to be so easily
+coerced. "You have thrown us out of all the land behind
+Valona," said the voice, "and out of Valona itself. You
+must, therefore, be the greatest warriors in the world,
+and we will be charmed to provide you with rifles and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
+machine guns and munitions and uniforms and cash.
+We will gladly publish to the world that your Delegation
+at Rome has sent us an official Note demanding that the
+Yugoslav troops should retire to the 1913 line, pure and
+simple. Of course we, like the other Allies, agreed that
+they should occupy the more advanced positions which
+General Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey assigned to them&mdash;and to
+show you how truly sorry we are for having done so, we
+propose to send you all the help you need. In dealing
+with us you will find that you have to do with honourable
+men, whereas the Yugoslavs&mdash;what are they but Yugoslavs?"</p>
+
+<p>Anyone who travelled about this time along the road
+from Scutari down to the port of San Giovanni di Medua
+would inevitably meet with processions of ancient cabs,
+ox-wagons and what not, laden with all kinds of military
+equipment. Some of these supplies had come direct
+from Italy, while others had been seized from the Italians
+near Valona. The detachment of Italian soldiers at San
+Giovanni, and the much larger detachment at Scutari,
+may have looked with mixed feelings at some of these
+commodities, but on the other hand they may have
+thought, with General Bencivenga,<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> that it was good
+business&mdash;"<i>un buon affare</i>"&mdash;in exchange for Valona to
+obtain a solid and secure friendship with the Albanians.
+Roads, as he pointed out, lead from Albania to the heart
+of Serbia, and for that reason a true brotherhood of arms
+between Italians and Albanians was, in case of hostilities,
+enormously to be desired. And so the Italians stationed
+at Scutari, under Captain Pericone of the Navy, may
+have felt that it was well that all those cannon captured
+from their countrymen were in such a good condition.
+They would now be turned by the Albanians against the
+hateful Yugoslavs. ["Italy is the one Power in Europe,"
+says her advocate, Mr. H.&nbsp;E. Goad, in the <i>Fortnightly
+Review</i> (May 1922), "that is most obviously and most consistently
+working for peace and conciliation in every field."] ...
+A further supply of military material is said to have
+reached the Albanians from Gabriele d'Annunzio in the
+<small>s.s.</small> <i>Knin</i>. To the Irish, the Egyptians and the Turks
+the poet-filibuster had merely sent greetings. Some one
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>may have told him that even the most lyrical greeting
+would not be valued by the Albanians half as much as a
+shipload of munitions.</p>
+
+<p>For a considerable time the more intelligent Italians
+had noticed that these two Balkan peoples were disposed
+to live in amicable terms with one another. Traditions
+that are so powerful with an illiterate people&mdash;under
+five per thousand of the Albanians who have stayed in
+their own country can read and write&mdash;numerous traditions
+speak of friendship with the Serbs: Lek, the great
+legislator, was related to Serbian princes; Skanderbeg
+was an ally of the Serbs; "Most of the celebrated
+leaders of northern Albania and Montenegro," says
+Miss Durham, "seem to have been of mixed Serbian-Albanian
+blood"; Mustapha Vezir Bushatli strove
+together with Prince Milo&#353; against the Turks, and the
+same cause united the Serbian authorities to the famous
+Vezir Mahmud Begovi&#263; of Pe&#263;. A primitive people like
+the Albanians admire the warlike attributes beyond all
+others, and the exploits of the Serbian army in the
+European War inclined the hearts of the Albanians
+towards their neighbours. Some of them remembered
+at this juncture that their great-grandfathers or grandfathers
+had only become Albanian after having accepted
+the Muhammedan religion; now the old ikons were
+taken from their hiding-places. And there was, in fact,
+between the two Balkan people a spirit of cordiality which
+gave terrible umbrage to the Italians. So they took the
+necessary steps: many of the Catholic priests had been
+in Austria's pay, and these now became the pensioners
+of Italy. Monsignor Sereggi, the Metropolitan, used to
+be anti-Turk but, as was evident when in 1911 he negotiated
+with Montenegro, he is not personally anti-Slav.
+Yet he must have money for his clergy, for his seminary,
+and so forth. His friendship would be easily, one fancies,
+transferred from Rome to Belgrade if the Serbs are
+willing to provide the cash&mdash;and nobody can blame him.
+Leo Freund, who had been Vienna's secret agent and a
+great friend of Monsignor Bum&ccedil;i, the Albanian bishop,
+was succeeded by an Italian. But, of course, the new
+almoner did not confine his gifts to those of his own faith.
+Many of the leading Moslems were in receipt of a monthly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
+salary, and this was not so serious a burden for the
+Italians as one might suppose, since Albania is a poor
+country, and with no Austrian competition you found
+quite prominent personages deigning to accept a rather
+miserable wage. "And do you think," I asked of Musa
+Yuka, the courteous mayor of Scutari, "that those
+mountain tribes are being paid?" "Well," he said, "I
+think that it is not improbable." ... At the time of the
+Bosnian annexation crisis the Serbs had as their Minister
+of Finance the sagacious Patcho&ugrave;. The War Minister,
+a General, was strongly in favour of an instant declaration
+of war, and the Premier suggested that the matter
+should be discussed. He turned to the Minister of
+Finance and asked him whether he had sufficient money
+for such an undertaking. Patcho&ugrave; shook his head.
+"But our men are patriots! They will go without
+bread, they will go without everything!" exclaimed the
+General. "The horses and mules are not patriots,"
+said Patcho&ugrave;, "and if you want them to march you'll
+have to feed them." The Albanians were so little inclined
+to go to war with Yugoslavia that the Italians
+had, in various ways, to feed them nearly all. And what
+did the Albanians think of these intrigues? At any
+rate, what did they say? "Italy," quoth Professor
+Chimig&ograve;,<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> a prominent Albanian who teaches at Bologna,
+"Italy is always respected and esteemed as a great
+nation.... The Albanian Government," said he, "has
+charged me to declare in public that Albania does not
+regard herself as victorious against Italy, but is convinced
+that the Italians, in withdrawing their troops
+from Valona, were obeying a sentiment of goodness and
+generosity." Such words would be likely to bring more
+plentiful supplies from Rome. And fortunately the
+Italians did not seem to suffer, like the Serbs, from any
+scruples as to the propriety of taking active steps against
+another "Allied and Associated Power." When Zena
+Beg Riza Beg of Djakovica came in the year 1919 to his
+brother-in-law Ahmed Beg Mati, one of the Albanian
+leaders, he told him that the Belgrade Government, in
+pursuance of their policy "The Balkans for the Balkan
+peoples," would be glad if the Italians could be ousted
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>from Albania. Zena Beg returned with a request for
+money, guns and so forth; but they were not sent.</p>
+
+<p>Ahmed Beg and Zena Beg are patriotic young Albanian
+noblemen of ancient family and great possessions. But
+Zena Beg has the advantage of living in Yugoslavia,
+outside the atmosphere of corruption which is darkening
+his native land. Ahmed Beg, who in 1920 was Minister
+of the Interior, Minister of War, Governor of Scutari
+and Director (in mufti) of the military operations against
+the Yugoslavs, did not accept Italian bribes, but he was
+surrounded by those who did, and thus the gentle and
+industrious young man was being led to work against
+his own country's interests. With him at Scutari was
+another of the six Ministers of the Tirana Government,
+in the person of the venerable Moslem priest Kadri,
+Minister of Justice, and one of the four Regents, Monsignor
+Bum&ccedil;i. There was about it all an Oriental odour
+of the less desirable kind, which caused some observers
+to say that when Albania obtains her independence she
+will be a bad imitation of the old Turkey&mdash;a little Turkey
+without the external graces. When the thoughtful greybeard
+Kadri went limping down the main street, a protecting
+gendarme dawdled behind him, smoking a
+cigarette; but this endearing nonchalance was absent
+from the methods of government: any Albanian whose
+opinions did not coincide with those of the authorities
+could only express them at his peril. [Blood-vengeance
+is, to some extent, being deposed by party-vengeance&mdash;this
+having originated in the time of Wied, when the
+politicians were divided into Nationalists and Essadists,
+after which they became Italophils and Austrophils,
+who now have been succeeded by Italophils (who ask
+for an Italian mandate) and Serbophils and Grecophils
+(who desire that these countries should have no mandate,
+but should act in a friendly spirit towards an independent
+Albania). Meanwhile the Italophils, nearly all of them
+on Italy's pay-roll, were, till a few months ago, in the
+ascendant, and their attitude towards the other party
+was relentless.] One Alush Ljocha, for example, said
+that he thought it would be well if Yugoslavia and
+Albania lived on friendly terms with one another.
+Because of this&mdash;the Government having adopted other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
+ideas&mdash;his house at Scutari was burned,<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> and when we
+were discussing the matter at the palace of the Metropolitan,
+Monsignor Sereggi, I found that His Grace was
+emphatically in accord with a fiery Franciscan poet,
+Father Fichta, with the more placid Monsignor Bum&ccedil;i,
+and with two other ecclesiastics who were present. "We
+did well to burn his house, very well, I say!" exclaimed
+Father Fichta, "because Alush is only a private person
+and he has no business to concern himself with foreign
+countries." Of course, when Father Fichta made his
+comments on foreign countries it was not as a private
+person but as a responsible editor. Thus in the <i>Posta e
+Shqypnis</i> during the War he denounced Clemenceau and
+Lloyd George as such foes of humanity that their proper
+destination was a cage of wild beasts, and, after having
+visited France during 1919 as secretary to the sincere
+and credulous Bum&ccedil;i, he contributed anti-French and,
+I believe, anti-English poems to the <i>Epopea Shqyptare</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been told," I said, "by an intelligent Albanian
+who was educated at Robert College at Constantinople
+that the greatest hope for the country lies, in his opinion,
+in the increase of American schools, such as that one
+at Elbasan and the admirable institution at Samakoff
+in Bulgaria, where the Americans&mdash;in order not to be
+accused of proselytism&mdash;teach everything except
+religion."</p>
+
+<p>"If I had my own way," cried Fichta, "I would
+shut up these irreligious American schools. Religion is
+the base of the social life of this country."</p>
+
+<p>"And you and the Muhammedans," I asked, "do
+you think that your co-operation has a good prospect
+of enduring? With a country of no more than one and
+a half million inhabitants it is essential that you should
+be united."</p>
+
+<p>"God in Heaven! Who can tolerate such things?"
+exclaimed the Metropolitan. That very corpulent old
+gentleman was bouncing with rage on his sofa. "Is it
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>not horrible," he cried in Italian, "that this man should
+dare to come to my house and make propaganda against
+us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Really, sir, I am astonished," said Monsignor
+Bum&ccedil;i, reproachfully, in French, "that you should ask
+such a question." [It was answered a few weeks later,
+when Halim Beg Derala and Zena Beg&mdash;who, being outside
+Albania, were free to utter non-Governmental
+opinions&mdash;said that they had not the slightest doubt
+but that the friendship between the fanatic Moslem and
+the fanatic Catholic would come to an end and each of
+them would again in the first place think of his religion,
+so that, as heretofore, they would regard themselves as
+Turkish and Latin people rather than as Albanian. This
+foible does not apply to the Orthodox Albanians of the
+South, who are more patriotic.] "I am astonished," said
+the Monsignor, "that you should question our friendship
+with the Moslem. They have been the domineering
+party, but all that is finished, and we are the best of
+friends. See, they have chosen me to be one of the
+Regents!<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> Our Government of all the three religions is
+very good, and," said he, as he thumped the arm of his
+chair, "it insists on the Albanians obtaining justice in
+spite of our enemies."</p>
+
+<p>It chanced that I had met Father Achikou, Doctor
+of Theology and Philosophy, in the Franciscan church.
+Because his brother had had occasion to kill an editor
+in self-defence, this, perhaps the most enlightened,
+member of the Albanian Catholic clergy, had been compelled
+to remain for eight months in the church and its
+precincts, seeing that the Government was powerless to
+guarantee that he would not be overtaken by that national
+curse, the blood-vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, one cannot praise the custom of blood-vengeance,"
+said the Monsignor.</p>
+
+<p>"You spoke," I said, "of your Government insisting
+on justice for the Albanians."</p>
+
+<p>And some time after this Professor Achikou and another
+prominent young priest were deported to Italy
+and, I believe, interned in that country.... With their
+fate we may compare that of Dom Ndoc Nikai, a priest
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>whose anti-Slav paper, the <i>Bessa Shqyptare</i>, is alleged to
+exist on its Italian subsidy, and Father Paul Doday,
+whom Italy insisted on installing as Provincial of all
+the Franciscans (after vetoing at Rome the appointment
+of Father Vincent Pr&ecirc;nnushi, whom nearly all the
+Franciscans in Albania had voted for). Father Doday,
+it is interesting to note, is of Slav nationality, for he
+comes from Janjevo in Kossovo, but he studied in Italy,
+and has abandoned the ways of his ancestors. This
+town of some 500 houses, inhabited by Slavs from Dalmatia
+and a few Saxons who are now entirely Slavicized,
+still retains a costume that resembles the Dalmatian, as
+also a rather defective Dalmatian dialect. The Austrians
+for thirty years endeavoured to Albanize them, but the
+people resisted this and boycotted the church and school.
+The priest Lazar, who defended their Slav national
+conscience, was persecuted and forced to flee to Serbia&mdash;he
+is now Mayor of Janjevo. It usually happened, by
+the way, that the priests of this Catholic town came from
+Dalmatia; but the Slav idea could bridge over the
+difference between Catholicism and Orthodoxy, so that
+if no Catholic priest was available his place would
+be taken by an Orthodox priest from a neighbouring
+village. Only a few of the natives are anti-nationalists,
+having been brought up, like Father Doday, in some
+Italian or Austrian seminary. There are in Albania
+to-day about ten such priests who come from Janjevo....
+How well this Father Doday has served his masters
+may be seen in the case of the Franciscan priest in Shala,
+who, with the whole population of armed Catholics,
+resisted the Italian advance of 1920. Together with
+Lieut. Lek Marashi he organized komitadjis in Shala and
+elsewhere, his purpose being to liberate his country from
+the Italians. Since these latter could do nothing else
+against him they compelled the Bishop of Pulati to
+punish him; however, all that the Bishop did was to tell
+the patriot priest to go away. But Father Doday was
+more willing to work for the Italians; he excommunicated
+his fellow-countryman, on the ground that he would
+not come to Scutari, where his life would have been in
+danger.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">4. THE STATE OF ALBANIAN CULTURE</p>
+
+<p>But, you may say, one cannot in fairness expect the
+new Albanian Government to achieve in so short a time
+what the Serbian Government has effected among the
+Albanians of Kossovo, who are being persuaded to
+relinquish their devastating custom of blood-vengeance.
+Prior to March 1921, over 400 of its devotees and of
+brigands had given themselves up in Kossovo&mdash;turning
+away from the old days when, as one of them expressed it,
+"a shot from my rifle was heard at a distance of three
+hours' travel"; one of the most eminent among them
+disdained to surrender to a local authority and made
+his way to Belgrade, where he presented himself one
+afternoon to the astonished officials at the Ministry of the
+Interior. "After all," as Miss Durham has written, "the
+most important fact in northern Albania is blood-vengeance."
+What we must set out to probe is whether
+the Albanians, if they are left to themselves, will be able
+after a time to administer their country in a reasonably
+satisfactory manner.... Their culture is admittedly a
+very low one. In the realm of art a few love-songs
+and several proverbs were all that Consul Hahn could
+collect for his monumental work,<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> though his researches,
+which lasted for years, took him all over the country.
+One of these love-songs, a piece of six lines, will give some
+idea of their &aelig;sthetic value; a lover, standing outside
+the house of his lady, invites her to come out to him
+immediately; he threatens that if she disobeys him he
+will have his hair cut in the Western style, nay more, he
+will have it washed and then he will return, howling like
+a dog. Consul Hahn's summing up of the Albanians,
+by the way, stated that the social life of C&aelig;sar's <i>Bellum
+Gallicum</i> was applicable to the tribes which now inhabit
+southern Albania, those of the north not being
+equal to so high a standard. Yastrebow, the well-known
+Russian Consul-General, tells us of the villages of Retsch
+and Tschidna, where in winter men and women clothe
+themselves with rags, in summer with no rags&mdash;so that
+in the warmer months a visitor, presumably, in order not
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>to shock the natives, would take the precaution of depositing
+his clothes in some convenient cavern. On the other
+hand, when the ladies in waiting on the Princess of Wied
+drove out in low-cut dresses, it being warm weather, the
+people of Durazzo were scandalized at what they called
+the terrible behaviour of their Prince's harem. These
+mountain people live on maize and milk and cheese&mdash;salt
+is unknown to them. Baron Nopsca is regarded
+by the few educated Albanians as the most competent
+foreign observer. He knew the language well and
+travelled everywhere. One custom he relates of the
+Merturi is the sprinkling of ashes on a spot where they
+suspect that treasure is buried; on the next morning
+they look to see what animal has left on the ashes the
+print of its feet, and this tells them what sacrifice the
+guardian of the treasure demands&mdash;sheep or hen or
+human being. Miss Durham says that human excrement
+and water is the sole emetic known to the Albanians;
+it is used in all cases of poisoning. But the Albanian's
+death is most frequently brought about by gun-shot.
+"In Toplana," as they say, "people are killed like pigs"&mdash;42
+per cent. of the adults, according to Nopsca, dying
+a violent death. "It was her good government and her
+orderliness that obtained for her her admission to the
+League of Nations," said the Hon. Aubrey Herbert, M.P.,
+in the <i>Morning Post</i> of November 29, 1921. And the
+enthusiastic President of the Anglo-Albanian Society is
+modest enough to refrain from telling us how much she
+was indebted to his own championship. The evil eye is
+feared in Albania more than syphilis or typhus. Siebertz<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a>
+mentions a favourite remedy, which is to spit at the
+patient. A ceremonial spitting is also used by anyone
+who sees two people engaged in close conversation; very
+likely they are plotting against the third party, and by
+his timely expectoration their wicked plans will be
+upset.</p>
+
+<p>Absurd as it may sound, there are not a few Albanian
+apologists who lay the entire blame upon the Turks.
+They assert&mdash;and it is true&mdash;that Constantinople left this
+distant province so completely almost to its own devices
+that the suzerain might just as well not have existed.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>A few Turkish officials lived in the towns, in the country
+they showed themselves when they were furtively
+travelling through it; and the chief officials, such as the
+Vali of Scutari, were wont to be Albanians. And, being
+left by the Turks to evolve their own salvation, they
+turned Albania into a region of utter darkness&mdash;at any
+rate, they did practically nothing to shake off the barbarism
+which they had inherited. They have certain
+alluring attributes, such as their unpolluted medi&aelig;val
+ideas on the sanctity of guests and the punctilious maintenance
+of their honour,<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> their readiness to die for freedom
+as well as for a quarrel about a sheep, and their not infrequent
+personal magnetism. They are very abstemious,
+their morals are pure, they have certain mental qualities,
+as yet undeveloped, and they are thrifty. But "they
+are so devoid of both originality and unity," says Sir
+Charles Eliot,<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> that acutest of observers, "that it is vain
+to seek for anything in politics, art, religion, literature
+or customs to which the name Albanian can be properly
+applied as denoting something common to the Albanian
+race."</p>
+
+<p>The apologists, such as Miss Durham, argue that the
+other Balkan peoples suffered from a good deal of internal
+tumult after they had set themselves up as independent
+countries. And it is submitted that the Albanians would
+gradually develop the same national spirit as their
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>neighbours. But there are as yet, Miss Durham must
+acknowledge, very few signs that this will ever come to
+pass.</p>
+
+<p>"We are Albanians," said Monsignor Bum&ccedil;i, "we
+ask for Albania! We demand it! Surely you can see
+that we are all marching together, men from all parts of
+Albania, marching against the Yugoslavs. I say we are
+united."</p>
+
+<p>And some miles from Scutari a part of the Albanian
+army was returning from a foray into Yugoslavia. When
+they came into the territory of a certain tribe they were
+compelled, by way of toll, to surrender their booty. Such
+incidents occurred in several places, so that obviously
+the conditions still prevail that were described in 1905
+by Karl Steinmetz,<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> an Austrian engineer who learned
+the language and travelled through the country in the
+disguise of a Franciscan monk. "The tribes cannot
+conceive the idea of a higher unity," says he in one of
+his valuable books. [So that in attempting to build up
+the new State these tribal institutions should be used as
+much as possible. Except in the towns, which play a
+relatively small part in the country's life, the voting
+should be by tribes.] "How could a Nikaj and a Shala
+meet," says he, "except for mutual destruction? Will
+a Mirdite for a nice word give up his bandit expeditions
+to the plain? The local antagonisms are as yet far too
+great." More often than not you would find that the
+Albanians regard each other as at the time of the Balkan
+War, when, for example, a Serbian cavalry officer took the
+village of Puka and asked the mayor to lead him to the
+neighbouring village of Duci. His worship consented,
+but after walking on ahead for half an hour he stopped.
+"We are now midway between the two villages," he said,
+"and I can go no farther." "Unless you continue,"
+said the captain, "I shall be obliged to have you shot."
+"<i>Nukahaile</i> [I don't care]," said the Albanian. "It is
+all the same to me whether I am killed by you or by the
+men of Duci, and I certainly shall be killed if I show
+myself there."</p>
+
+<p>"We are all united, Catholic and Moslem. It is
+splendid!" said Monsignor Bum&ccedil;i. "And we are not by
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>any means fanatical&mdash;with us it is the country first and
+our religion afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>Certainly the Shqyptar is not so good a churchman
+as we have sometimes been led to believe. Prenk Bib
+Doda is said to have cherished the precepts of the Catholic
+Church with such devotion that he could not bring himself
+to institute divorce proceedings against his childless
+wife. We are told that his mother was animated with
+similar scruples, and that, to solve this awkward question
+the old lady one day seized a rifle and shot her daughter-in-law
+dead. There is not more truth in this tale than
+in that of the brigands who, on a certain Friday, overpowered
+and slew a caravan of merchants between Dibra
+and Prizren. On examining their spoil they are said to
+have discovered a large amount of meat, but, as it was
+Friday, to have refrained from consuming it. Prenk Bib
+Doda was, as a matter of fact, impotent; and his widow,
+Lucia Bib Doda, survives him.... One agrees with
+Monsignor Bum&ccedil;i that the Albanian is not altogether so
+blindly a supporter of his Church as we have been told,
+and his murderous intentions against a neighbouring
+tribe will be not at all diminished if they happen to profess
+the same religion as himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Anyone can see," quoth the Monsignor, "that the
+Government is dear to us. Men are coming from all over
+the country, anxious to execute its wishes and to be enrolled
+against the Yugoslav."</p>
+
+<p>Yes, we saw numbers of men tramping up to Scutari,
+from boys to septuagenarians. They were going to
+fight&mdash;it pleased them enormously. But if the Tirana
+Government had ordered them to go back and work on
+their fields, if it had asked them to take some precautions
+against the ravages of syphilis, if it had expressed the
+hope that they would no longer sell their women for an
+old Martini, or that the village prefects would pay some
+regard to sanitary matters&mdash;in the whole of Albania,
+says Siebertz, there is only one <small>w.c.</small>&mdash;then they would
+have laughed at this Government which tried to lay a
+hand on their ancestral liberties.</p>
+
+<p>"The end of it all is," said the Monsignor, "we
+are Albanians. We demand the independence of our
+country."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"As a Latin," writes Professor Katarani,<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> "I was
+fire and flame for Albania.... But after a few months
+I was forced not only to change my views about them,
+but to regret all that I had written in the <i>Mattino</i> and the
+<i>Tribuna</i>.... They are not a people, but tribes ...
+they are against every principle of public officials, they
+live the most primitive lives. I who know Albania
+from end to end, who have sacrificed myself for that
+country, am absolutely convinced that there could be no
+greater misfortune than if, in its present state, it were
+given autonomy or independence. Otherwise I confess
+that an Albania free from any foreign Power would be
+to the interest of Italy." And he concludes by saying
+that the Albanians have done nothing to deserve an
+independent State. It is well known that in the Albanian
+Societies that after May 1913 were engaged at Constantinople
+and Sofia, at Rome and Vienna, in striving
+for the independence of the country it was not the
+Albanians themselves who had the chief word. Those
+who were initiated into secret Balkan policies were aware
+that Albania was the domain with which Article 7 of
+the old Triple Alliance was concerned.... The fiery
+Albanian patriot, Basri Bey, Prince of Dukagjin, also
+agrees that in the beginning an independent Albania
+would be productive of anarchy. "I greatly regret to
+acknowledge it," says he,<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> "but Albania is, so to speak,
+the classic type of a country which has never had a real
+government." Nevertheless, he is strongly in favour of
+independence, his reasons being because Albania is "at
+the same time the old mother and the youngest daughter
+of the Balkans." This flamboyant prince and doctor
+and deputy who denounces both Essad Pasha and his
+nephew Ahmed Beg Mati, has got his own panacea for
+the country, which is a Turkish army of occupation
+commanded by a French general. Basri Bey seems to
+confirm the remarks of his more enlightened co-religionists,
+Halim Beg Derala and Zena Beg, for whereas the
+Moslems can claim no more than a rather larger third of
+the inhabitants, he calmly assumes that the whole country
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>is Moslem. Albania, he says, is now more than ever
+attached to Turkey, for the attachment is purely moral.
+... The influence of this gentleman seems to be confined
+to Dibra, but he has a good opinion of his own importance.
+In 1915, in the days of the greatness of Essad
+Pasha, he set up a Government at Dibra with himself
+as Prime Minister and Essad Pasha as his Minister of
+the Interior! There does not seem to be much justification
+for Basri Bey to call himself a prince. He is a
+Pomak, for his ancestors were Bulgars who accepted
+Islam. His father was an official of the Turkish Government
+at Philippopolis.</p>
+
+<p>Father Fichta told me that his countrymen would do
+very well indeed if they could import from other parts
+of Europe financial help, technicians and judges. Some
+years ago the Turks settled to send two judges to Scutari;
+then the Albanians would no longer be able to charge
+them with not administering the law, so that each man
+was obliged to take it into his own hands. "It is
+entirely your fault," said the Albanians, "that we are
+driven to adopt the method of blood-vengeance." So
+thoroughly did they adopt it that the assassinations in
+the region of Prizren, Djakovica and Pe&#263; amounted,
+according to Gl&uuml;ck, to a total of about six hundred a
+year. The Turks therefore sent a couple of judges to
+Scutari, and on the day after their arrival they were
+murdered.</p>
+
+<p>What memory have the Albanians of their own great
+men? One sultry afternoon, as we were driving in a
+mule cart from the quaint town of Alessio, the driver
+lashed his mule with a long stick; but after half a mile
+of this, the animal applied a hind-leg sharply to the
+driver's mouth. He roared and fell back in our arms
+and bled profusely and was doctored by the fierce
+gendarme, who put a handful of tobacco on the wound,
+so that the driver had to keep his mouth shut. For the
+remainder of the afternoon our mule went at a walking
+pace, and presently, to while away the time, we begged
+the gendarme and a merchant of Alessio, who was travelling
+with us, to repeat the song of some old hero, such as
+Skanderbeg. They stared&mdash;their mouths were also shut.
+And finally the gendarme said he knew a hero-song. It<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
+dealt with Zeph, a man with sheep, and Mark who stole
+them. "Give me back my sheep," said Zeph. "No,
+no!" said Mark. "Beware!" said Zeph. And one day,
+as he hid behind a wall, he fired at Mark and slew him.
+"That is the song," said the gendarme, "about the hero
+Zeph."</p>
+
+<p>To whatever state of culture the Albanians may climb,
+I think it will be generally agreed that some r&eacute;gime
+other than unaided independence must, in the meantime,
+be established there. One hears of those who argue that
+Albania should forthwith be for the Albanians, because
+they are a gifted and a very ancient people. They are
+not more gifted than the Basques, and their antiquity is
+not more wonderful. Nor do they stand on a higher
+level of culture with respect to their neighbours than do
+the Basques as compared with theirs. Not many tears
+are shed by the Basques or by anyone else because those
+interesting men are all the subjects of France or Spain.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">5. A METHOD THAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN TRIED IN
+ALBANIA</p>
+
+<p>If only the Albanian question would be taken in
+hand by humanitarians.... Here you have one and a
+half million of wild children.... Build them schools
+and roads, police their country&mdash;they themselves agree
+that the savage atmosphere in the northern mountains
+was radically altered by the Austrians when they occupied
+that country during the War. One has heard of numerous
+philanthropic societies in Great Britain whose object
+has been more remote and less deserving; if some such
+society would turn to Albania, their educational and
+economic labours might, after a time, be made self-supporting
+by the permission to exploit&mdash;of course, with
+due regard to Albania's future&mdash;the forests and mines.
+"To be master in Albania," says M. Gabriel Hanotaux,
+"one would have to dislodge the inhabitants from their
+eyries"&mdash;(another French statesman has used a less
+exalted simile: "Albania," M. Briand once said, "is
+an international lavatory")&mdash;and it goes without saying
+that any corporation which undertakes to civilize the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
+Shqyptart would need to bring in a military force, on
+similar lines to the Swedish <i>gendarmerie</i> in Persia. The
+Swedes, in fact, who are a military nation, might be
+glad to accept this mandate; the expenses could be
+met by an international fund. A certain number
+of Albanians would be admitted to the <i>gendarmerie</i>;
+and the more unruly natives would be dealt with
+as they were, for everybody's good, by Austria....
+The Yugoslavs would then be delighted to accept the
+1913 frontier, which is also what the Albanians ask for;
+and Yugoslavs, Italians and Greeks would all retire
+from Albania. There is really no need for the Italians
+to demand Valona or Saseno, the island which lies in
+front of it. The Italian naval experts know very well
+that the possession of Pola, Lussin and Lagosta would
+not be made more valuable by the addition of an Albanian
+base.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">6. THE ATTRACTION OF YUGOSLAVIA</p>
+
+<p>But as Europe has not arrived at some such solution,
+and since the Albanian Government has been prematurely
+recognized by the Powers, then while the Albanians are
+engaged in the stormy process of working out their own
+salvation, it is only fair that Yugoslavia should be given
+a good defensive frontier. The 1913 frontier is only
+possible if the Albanians are pacific, but as it has now
+been thought wise to set up an unaided and independent
+Albanian State there is nothing more certain than the
+turmoil of which its borders will be the scene, and this
+will be so whether the Italians do or do not come to
+the Albanians' assistance. What hope is there of even
+a relative tranquillity on the Albanian border when so
+many of the natives, preferring Yugoslav rule to that of
+their own countrymen, will be waging a civil war? That
+this preference is fairly widespread one could see in 1920
+by the number of refugees on the Yugoslav side of the
+frontier. [Of course, a large number of Albanians also
+fled to Scutari and elsewhere from the districts lately
+occupied by the Yugoslav army. In both cases the
+refugees were moved sometimes by hopes for a brighter<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
+future, sometimes by fears which were caused by their
+clouded past. To speak first of those who fled on account
+of a guilty conscience, it is evident that these were more
+numerous among the refugees in Albania than among
+those in Yugoslavia, for it was the Yugoslav authorities
+and not the Albanian who extended their sway. Mr.
+Aubrey Herbert, M.P., wrote<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> "that in the North the
+Yugoslavs had destroyed more than 120 Albanian
+villages." It would have been interesting if he had given
+us their names, because the Yugoslavs appear to have
+set about it so thoroughly that one cannot find anything
+like that number on the Austrian maps, which are the
+best pre-war maps for those regions. The Anglo-Albanian
+Society tells the British public, in November,
+1920, of the 30,000 destitute refugees in Albania, and
+in such a way that the cause of their exodus is ascribed,
+without more ado, to the terrible Yugoslav. But as the
+names are known of a good many Albanians who did
+not wait for the Yugoslav army, on account of past
+troubles between themselves and Yugoslavs, as also
+between themselves and other Albanians, it would have
+been as well if the Anglo-Albanian Society had reminded
+the public that all who fly in those parts are not angels.
+It would, on the other hand, be just as rash to sing the
+undiluted praise of those Albanians who, at odds with
+the Tirana Government, thought it opportune to leave
+their native land; but one can safely say, I think, that
+among these wanderers there was a larger proportion of
+laudable men....] Yugoslavia attracts the Albanians
+for more than one reason&mdash;not so much because the
+ancestors of many of these Muhammedan Albanians
+were, and not so long ago, Christians, as because inclusion
+in Yugoslavia would be to their economic advantage&mdash;Scutari
+can scarcely exist without the Yugoslav hinterland,
+while the people of the mountains are longing for
+that railway which the Yugoslavs will only build over
+land which is moderately immune from depredation.
+Other causes which have made so many of the borderland
+Albanians&mdash;to speak only of them&mdash;turn their eyes
+to Yugoslavia are the admiration which any primitive
+people feels for military prowess and the knowledge of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>what has taken place in the Prizren-Pe&#263;-Djakovica
+region since it came into possession of the Serbs in 1913.
+Let us in the first place see what sentiments are now
+entertained by the Albanian natives of that region towards
+their rulers. It goes without saying that these
+sentiments are perfectly well known to those Albanians
+who live outside the Yugoslav frontier.</p>
+
+<p>Well, at Suva Rieka, near Prizren, for example, I
+found that all the Muhammedan inhabitants of Serbian
+origin are aware that they used to celebrate the Serbian
+national custom of "Slava," still keep up the Serbian
+Christmas Eve customs and often practise the old Christian
+nine days' wailing for the dead. Some of us may think
+that this new pro-Serbian tendency is rather on account
+of utilitarian reasons; the great thing is that it should
+exist. With rare exceptions, the people of Suva Rieka
+used to live by plunder; now they are sending their
+children to the Serbian school, at any rate the boys,
+and for the study of religion the authorities have made
+arrangements with a local Moslem. It is to be regretted
+that Miss Edith Durham, whose writings were so pleasant
+in the days before she became a more uncompromising
+pro-Albanian than most of the Albanian leaders, says
+that if these children go to Serbian schools it merely
+shows to what lengths of coercion the Serbs will resort.
+In 1912-1913 Serbian and Montenegrin officers seem to
+have told her that severe measures would be employed
+against any recalcitrant Albanian parent who might
+decline to send his son to school. Assuming that these
+officers were not young subalterns, that they were quite
+sober and that they were not rudely "pulling Miss
+Durham's leg," it may be urged that even if the children
+be driven to school at the point of the bayonet, such
+conduct would compare favourably with that of the
+Albanians towards the Serbs in Turkish times. Talking
+of coercion, I suppose that the progress in agricultural
+methods which one sees around Prizren is only further
+evidence of Serbian tyranny. The <i>gendarmerie</i> on the
+country roads is composed largely of Muhammedan
+Albanians&mdash;doubtless the Serbs have coerced them by
+some horrible threats. And if Miss Durham were to hear
+that Ramadan (<i>n&eacute;</i> Stojan) Stefanovi&#263; of the village of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
+Musotisti had decided to return to the Orthodox faith
+to which his brothers George and Ilja had been more
+faithful than himself&mdash;such variegated families are not
+uncommon&mdash;I believe, though I may be doing her an
+injustice, that her first impulse would be to write to the
+papers in drastic denunciation of the Serbian authorities.
+They have, like most of us, sufficient to regret&mdash;for
+example, the person whom they sent to Pe&#263;, when they
+wanted the land to be distributed, was King Peter's
+Master of the Horse. He was thoroughly unsuitable,
+and caused a great deal of dissatisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>There was a time at the rather gloomy town of
+Djakovica, when, owing to the blood-vengeance, the
+Merturi were unable for eight years to enter the place;
+now they come in, merely to gaze at the Serbian major
+who is in command. Halim Beg Derala, the aristocratic
+and wealthy ex-mayor, who as a pastime used to plan
+an occasional robbery in Turkish days, told me&mdash;he speaks
+a little French, in addition to Albanian, Turkish, Serbian
+and Greek&mdash;that citizens were often unable to leave their
+houses for two months at a time,<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> and although every
+house was provisioned for a siege, yet one frequently
+had to manage without bread. Now the candid-eyed,
+fair-bearded priest rides out with Ljuba Kujundji&#263;, the
+erstwhile leader of komitadji, in order to negotiate
+with the Albanian Zeph Voglia, at that personage's own
+request, for his surrender to the Serb authorities. Zeph
+has written from a forest that he feels uneasy, because
+he owes sixteen blood-vengeances. He asks that his
+affairs may be settled by the law, and those sixteen
+pursuing countrymen of his have signified that this will
+meet their views, since in the first place the Serbs are
+disinterested in the matters between them, and, secondly,
+the Serbian penalties are not so mild as theirs, not permitting
+that a murder shall be expiated by the payment
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>of a moderate sum or that a guilty party may absent
+himself for three years and suffer no further loss than the
+devastation of his house. Another sphere in which the
+Serbs have gained Albanian sympathies is with regard
+to the disputed ownership of land. Even as the Moors
+have been in the habit of handing down, from father to
+son, the key of some Sevillan house that vanished centuries
+ago, the Montenegrins, more fortunate, have been appearing
+with the ancient title-deeds of lands that now are
+in Albanian possession. According to Serbian law it is
+the oldest document which prevails. And the Albanians
+are generously compensated.... Those who, with the
+highest motives, advocate "Albania for the Albanians,"
+may argue that the medi&aelig;val activities of Riza Beg
+and Bairam Beg Zur&mdash;whose adherents started shooting
+at each other every evening after six o'clock in the refuse-laden
+streets of Djakovica&mdash;would have been concluded
+and would not have been continued by their sons even
+if the Serbs had not appeared. Let them, before proclaiming
+the modern reasonableness of the Albanians,
+recollect that in 1919 the Moslem Bosniak ex-prisoners
+required on the average three months in order to traverse
+central Albania, the country of their co-religionists.
+From village to village the Bosniaks made their way,
+earning a little and then being plundered at the next
+place. Eighty per cent. of this population believe, in
+their fanaticism, that the Sultan will again unfurl over
+them his flag and that the world will ultimately be converted
+to Muhammed. And if, entertaining such ideas,
+they are so rigorous towards their fellow-Moslems, what
+prospect is there that this 80 per cent. will assist the
+Orthodox and Catholic Albanians in building up a State?
+Their ferocity, in fact, is so profound that it thrives on a
+diet which is chiefly of milk.... Perhaps a day will
+come when the Albanian will submit to be ruled by a
+member of another tribe, when local politics will engage
+his attention less than the silver, iron, copper, arsenic
+and water-power of his country. Perhaps the day will
+come. Midway between Djakovica and the monastery
+of De&#269;ani there stand two large houses side by side.
+In 1909 a man belonging to one of them slew four men
+of the other house, and on account of this he fled beyond<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
+the Drin, together with thirteen other men of his family.
+There is no knowing how long these refugees would have
+stayed away if that part of the country had not come
+under Serbian rule, but in 1919 negotiations were set on
+foot which&mdash;to the satisfaction of the members of the
+other house&mdash;would enable the thirteen innocent refugees
+to return, while the criminal would be arrested.</p>
+
+<p>As evidence of the cordiality now prevailing between
+Albanian and Serb in Yugoslavia, one may mention
+those cases where the Albanians in 1919 entered into a
+bond that for six months they would exact no blood-vengeance
+from their fellow-countrymen; the number
+of these debts which hitherto had been regarded as debts
+of honour was very considerable, for they were not only
+incurred by assassination but could also be in payment
+of a mere scowl or of your wife, from within the house,
+having heard the voice of another man raised in song.
+The Serbian authorities are hoping confidently that the
+Albanians who have thus for a season placed themselves
+under the law will be ready in the future to pledge themselves.
+They are beginning to see that in a place the size
+of Djakovica it should be possible to make a wheel,
+that one should be able to find a shop whose contents
+are worth more than 100 francs, that the breed of their
+cattle, of their sheep and goats and horses could be
+vastly improved, that if their land were sanely treated
+it could be rendered much more fertile, and that their
+system of fruit cultivation is absurdly primitive....
+And with Djakovica and the whole region of Kossovo
+being treated as we have shown by the Yugoslavs I think
+it will be almost as great a surprise to the reader as it
+was to the local population when he learns that in a
+memorandum of April 26, 1921, the Tirana Government
+complained to the League of Nations that the Yugoslav
+civil and military officials were behaving in a very pitiless
+fashion towards the Albanians. Certainly they have not
+as yet established Albanian schools, but they propose
+to do so when there is accommodation and when teachers
+are available; and then, maybe, to the disgust of Miss
+Durham, Mr. Herbert, etc., the Albanians of the district
+will, with an eye to the future, prefer to visit the Yugoslav
+schools.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">7. RELIGIOUS AND OTHER MATTERS IN THE BORDER
+REGION</p>
+
+<p>Having glanced at what the Serbs have done in such
+a very short time&mdash;most of the years since 1913 being
+years of war&mdash;to win the gratitude of their Albanian
+fellow-subjects, we shall, in following a possible frontier
+between Yugoslavia and the Albanians, at any rate
+believe that many Albanians of those thus coming under
+Yugoslav rule would regard the change, as well they may,
+with equanimity. Suppose, then, that the frontier were
+to run along the watershed at the top of the mountain
+range to the west of Lake Ochrida. The people living
+to the east of this line in that district would acknowledge
+their Serbian origin. Thence passing to the neighbourhood
+of the village of Lin and from there in a northwesterly
+direction, so as to include in Yugoslavia the
+Golo Brdo, the so-called Bald Mountains, whose thirty
+villages are inhabited by Islamized Serbs who only speak,
+with very rare exceptions, the Serbian language, one
+may say that not only would their inclusion in Yugoslavia
+be beneficial to these people, but that they would accept
+it with alacrity. No very deep impression has been
+made upon them by the religion to which, not long ago,
+they were converted. In the Golo Brdo it was in great
+measure due to the Greek Church which, about the
+middle of the nineteenth century, left the region without
+a single priest, so that children of the age of eight had
+not been christened, and the people in disgust went
+over to Islam. Near Ochrida, some of them were asked
+whether they frequented the mosque.</p>
+
+<p>"Never," they replied.</p>
+
+<p>"What is your religion?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it is very strange," they told us, "but we have
+none."</p>
+
+<p>"What religion did you formerly have?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we don't know."</p>
+
+<p>Their priest roams the mountains with his gun, and
+there has been a tendency, since a man in this position
+received his salary from the State, for many to persuade
+the mufti to appoint them, irrespective of whether they
+could read or write. The devout Moslem is, to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
+exclusion of everything else, a Moslem; but in these
+districts, where the faith was assumed in a moment
+of pique or as a protection, and where the Muhammedan
+clergy has been so negligent, the people are gladly cultivating
+their Christian relatives. In the district of Suva
+Rieka one hears of conversions to Christianity, and the
+functionaries bring no pressure to bear, unlike the misguided
+Montenegrin officials who in 1912 rode into Pe&#263;,
+the old Patriarchate, and wanted in their delight to have
+everyone immediately to adopt the Orthodox faith.
+Now the authorities, with greater wisdom, do not interfere
+in these matters. They know that Yugoslavia will have
+no enemy in that house in the village of Brod, between
+Tetovo and Prizren, where two brothers are living
+together, of whom one went over to Islam. They know
+that the Muhammedan Krasnichi of Albania are proclaiming
+their kinship with the great Montenegrin clan
+of Vasojevi&#263;, that the Gashi are calling to the Piperi
+and the Berishi to the Ku&#269;i. The new cordiality will be
+impaired neither by the differences of religion nor by
+the similarity of costume. The average Albanian of
+Djakovica would not be any fonder of an Orthodox
+fellow-citizen if the latter continues to wear the Albanian
+dress which was generally adopted about a hundred
+years ago, and the Vasojevi&#263; may please themselves as
+to the wearing of a costume which they once found so
+useful in the Middle Ages. They happened to be for ten
+days in the Hoti country for the purpose of wiping out
+a blood affair, and when they were about to fall into the
+Hoti's hands they shouted, "What do you want with
+us? We are Kastrati!" The Kastrati, to whom these
+Albanian-clad people were led, confirmed the statement,
+so that the Vasojevi&#263; earned for themselves the nickname
+of Kastratovi&#263;.</p>
+
+<p>From the Golo Brdo the best frontier would pass
+north-eastwards to the Black Drin and along that river
+until it is joined by the White Drin. This is a poor
+country whose inhabitants are, for the most part, Moslemized
+Serbs. About a hundred men are now engaged
+in excavating the very finely decorated Serbian church
+at Pi&#353;kopalja on the Drin&mdash;much to the edification of
+the local Moslems. This church of their ancestors was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
+covered in during the Middle Ages in order to conceal it
+from the Turks. Too often the natives' present occupation
+is brigandage; but from of old they have had
+economic relations with Prizren, to which old town of
+vine-arched, narrow, winding streets and picturesque
+bazaars these countryfolk have been accustomed to come
+every week. These Moslems (of whom there are some
+100,000 in the department of Prizren, with 13,000
+Orthodox and 3000 Catholics) used to detest the
+Christians on account of their religion, although half of
+the Moslems could speak nothing but Serbian. The
+Serbs, it must be admitted, were not always blameless;
+in the early nineties, for example, they suspended a pig's
+head outside the mosque. And the amenities of Prizren
+were complicated by the hostility between Orthodox and
+Catholic. This was largely due to the fact that, by the
+intervention of the French Consul after the Crimean War,
+the Catholics&mdash;descendants of Ragusan emigrants of the
+Middle Ages&mdash;had secured the former Orthodox church
+of St. Demetrius, in which church, by the way, the services
+had come to be held in Albanian. When the Vatican, in
+the second half of the nineteenth century, sent a Serbian
+priest, the congregation had become so thoroughly
+Albanized that after a year he had to leave. The propaganda
+of Austria, Italy and Russia did nothing towards
+persuading the three religions of Prizren to regard each
+other in a more amicable fashion; while Italy and Austria
+gave exclusive assistance to the Catholics, whom they
+found in such distress that, forty years ago, most of them
+went barefoot, the presence of the Russian Consul was
+of such importance to the Orthodox that their position
+at Prizren was better than in their old patriarchal town
+of Pe&#263;. Nowadays, with Austrian and Russian propaganda
+deleted, there is only that of the Italians, whose
+proposal to create an independent Albania (under Italian
+protection) was at first applauded by some simple folk in
+1919. The Moslem took to accepting Italian money
+and then honourably informing the Yugoslav authorities
+that they had been appointed as agents of Italy; they
+offered to capture the Franciscan priests with whose
+help the Italians were trying to secure the Catholics; and
+as for the cash, it seems mostly to have been spent in a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
+convivial fashion by the Moslems and the Serbs together.
+This friendship appears likely to continue, for the Serbian
+authorities, so far from countenancing such pranks as
+that of the pig's head, do not even propose to reconsecrate
+their ancient church of Petka. When this building
+was made into a mosque, the Moslem still permitted
+the Christian women to come and pray there, while if a
+Christian man was sick they let him leave a jar of water
+in the mosque all night, so that it might acquire certain
+medicinal properties. It is the intention of the Serbs not
+to restore the church to Christian worship, but to turn it
+into a museum.</p>
+
+<p>With the frontier then being drawn along the Drin,
+towards the Adriatic, the famous villages of Plav and
+Gusinje would definitely pass to Yugoslavia, in accordance
+with the wishes of a deputation sent by them to
+Belgrade in 1919. The well-meaning British champions
+of Gusinje, who maintain that this village is furiously
+antagonistic to the Slav and is ready to struggle to the
+uttermost rather than be incorporated in a Slav kingdom,
+these champions do not, I think, draw a sufficient
+distinction between Montenegro and Yugoslavia. Plav,
+with its mostly Christian population, and Gusinje, where
+the Moslem preponderates, refused at the time of the
+Berlin Congress to be given to Montenegro, with which
+they had certain local quarrels. Nicholas reported to
+the Powers which had awarded him these places that they
+were obdurate, for which reason he was given in their
+stead a much-desired strip of coast, down to Dulcigno,
+and nothing could have suited that astute monarch
+better. Nikita&mdash;to call him by his familiar name&mdash;imagined
+that the two villages would eventually fall to
+Montenegro, because of the formidable mountains which
+divide them from the rest of Albania; the road from
+Gusinje to Scutari is very long and very arduous. When
+Montenegro succeeded in capturing Plav in 1912, a certain
+Muhammedan priest of that place joined the Orthodox
+Church and was appointed a major in the Montenegrin
+army. He acted as the president of a court-martial,
+and in that capacity is reputed to have hanged or shot,
+some say, as many as five hundred of his former
+parishioners, because they declined to be baptized. He<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
+told them that their ancestors were all Serbs, and that
+therefore they should follow his example. Since the
+Montenegrins did not restrain this over-zealous man, the
+villagers were naturally not in favour of that country.
+Montenegro had a very small number of good officials,
+owing to Nikita's peculiar management which, in considering
+his favourites, did not regard illiteracy as a bar
+to the highest administrative or judicial post.... The
+people of Plav and Gusinje have, on the other hand, no
+hostility against Serbia. In November 1918 a detachment
+of thirty Serbs was stationed at Gusinje, what time
+certain Italian agents put it into the shallow minds of
+some Albanians that Albania desired to be independent
+under Italian protection. Nothing happened when a
+Serbian force came from Mitrovica, except that these
+agents and a few of their tools&mdash;be it noted that perhaps
+half the population is ignorant of the Albanian language&mdash;withdrew
+to the Rugovo district, where they tried to
+induce the people to fly with them, so that the world
+would hear how iniquitously the Serbs had acted. Those
+of Rugovo refused to accompany them; in consequence
+of which there was a fight, some houses were burned,
+some women and cattle were seized. And afterwards
+the men of Rugovo repaired to Gusinje and exacted a
+vengeance which, the most Serbophobe person will admit,
+had nothing to do with the Serbs. The luckless village
+of Gusinje was again laid waste in 1919 by the Montenegrins,
+but this came to pass as the result of the Montenegrin
+clan of Vasojevi&#263; having their property ravaged by
+some Albanian marauders who were prompted by the
+same Great Power. The Vasojevi&#263; believed that this
+evil deed was done by the men of Gusinje, so that they
+destroyed their houses. When the facts were explained
+to them, the Vasojevi&#263; said that they were prepared to
+rebuild the village. And now Plav and Gusinje, who ask
+for Serbian and not Montenegrin officials, recognize that
+it is impossible for them to live except in union with
+Yugoslavia.... Miss Durham's wrath concerning an
+affair which happened during 1919 in this region shows to
+what lengths a partisan will go. She complained with
+great bitterness that the Serbs had actually arrested a
+British officer whose purpose it was to make investigations.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Serbs are human beings and are not immune
+from error; and Miss Durham is so determined to expose
+them that if all her charges were dealt with from Belgrade
+it would necessitate the appointment of one or two
+more officials. But in this particular case she is not the
+sole accuser. A Captain Willett Cunnington&mdash;who,
+according to the President of the Anglo-Albanian Society,
+the Hon. Aubrey Herbert, M.P., has several years'
+intimate experience of Albania&mdash;said in the <i>New Statesman</i>
+that in consequence of what occurred to Captain
+Brodie the Serbian Government was compelled to
+apologize abjectly. Now I happen to be very well
+acquainted with the stalwart Pouni&#353;a Ra&#269;i&#263;, the Montenegrin
+who arrested Brodie. Albanians have told me
+that Pouni&#353;a's knowledge of the north and north-west
+of their country is not a matter of villages but of houses.
+And he has always observed the customs which prevail
+in those houses, so that when he is known to be approaching,
+the people who live at a distance of many hours
+will come to meet him, whether for the pure delight of
+discharging their firearms to his greater glory or for the
+purpose of seeking his advice. It is not because he has
+studied jurisprudence in Paris that they respect him in
+that bitter region, but because he does not disregard the
+laws that govern the wild hearts on both sides of the
+frontier. Yet I suppose Captain Brodie had never heard
+of him&mdash;poor Captain Brodie! unconscious of the great
+good luck which had brought him into the presence of
+this man who could have made his journey much more
+pleasant for himself and vastly more profitable for his
+superiors.</p>
+
+<p>This is what Pouni&#353;a Ra&#269;i&#263; told me:</p>
+
+<p>"At the end of January and the beginning of
+February 1919, we were having a certain amount of
+trouble in the Gusinje and Plav district, where I
+was acting as delegate of the Belgrade Government.
+Travellers were being murdered, telephone wires were
+being cut, and so forth. In those parts, which I have
+known for so many years, it is a good deal easier to
+ascertain a criminal's name than to seize him, and I had
+not captured these malefactors when one day I had
+a message to say that a European Commission was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
+approaching. Later on I was told that thirty-nine of its
+members were Albanians. I ordered my lieutenant to
+find out whether they were from our territory, in which
+case they were to be disarmed and brought to me; or
+from Albania, in which event they were to be received
+politely. A quarter of an hour after this I was told that
+they were all well-known brigands from our State, and
+there was one specially notorious person, Djer Doucha,
+who in 1912 was converted to Christianity and was made
+a gendarme at the court of King Nicholas; in 1915, after
+the Austrian invasion, he was reconverted to Islam and
+became a sergeant of <i>gendarmerie</i>. In that position he
+killed fifty or sixty Serbs and Montenegrins, to say
+nothing of his other acts of violence. In 1918, for instance,
+he murdered seven school-children whom he met on the
+road.</p>
+
+<p>"I had some urgent business at Plav," continued
+Ra&#269;i&#263;, "and there all these people were brought before
+me. In addition to the thirty-nine Albanians there were
+three men in British uniforms. I was acquainted with
+one of them, a certain Perola, a Catholic of Pe&#263;, a former
+Austrian agent who had committed many crimes against
+the Serbs and had lately escaped from the prison at Pe&#263;.
+One of the other two said that he was Captain Brodie,
+whom the London Government had sent as their delegate
+for Albania and Montenegro. I suppose the third man
+was his British orderly; I never heard him speak. But
+Brodie said many things. One of them (which was
+quite true) was that his Government had not yet recognized
+the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.
+He demanded the instant release of his companions.
+'Do you know who they are?' said I. 'That is no
+concern of yours,' said he. 'Well,' said I, 'they are
+criminals, and it is for the judges to say whether or not
+they are to be liberated.' 'I protest,' he exclaimed, 'in
+the name of England, against their arrest!' 'And I
+thank you,' said I, 'in the name of the Serbian police,
+for having brought them here.' 'You are a savage,
+a barbarous nation!' said he, 'and you don't deserve
+to be free and independent.' 'Sir,' said I, 'if you are an
+Englishman you should know that we are your allies,
+that you and we have shed our blood for the common<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
+cause. We love England very much, and I am very
+surprised to hear a British officer speak in this way.'
+Again he demanded to be set free, he and all his people,
+so that he could continue his mission; but I told him
+that after what I had heard from him and what I had
+seen of his escort, I could not permit him to go on to
+other villages unless he could show me an authorization
+from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at Belgrade. 'I
+do not recognize the Belgrade Government,' said he.
+'Whom, then,' I asked, 'do you regard as the legitimate
+ruler of this country?' 'King Nicholas,' said he, 'and
+the Government of Montenegro.' So I advised him to
+get a visa from King Nicholas and to come back to perform
+his mission, when that visa would be honoured. 'Anyhow,'
+said he, 'the people of these parts are against
+Serbia.' Thereupon I sent for the chief men and told
+them to say quite candidly in front of this Englishman
+what they wanted. There were five Moslems, including
+Islam and Abdi Beg Rejepagi&#263; (the leading family) and
+Ismael Omeragi&#263;, also two Christians, of whom I remember
+Stani&#269;a Turkovi&#263;. 'Long live Serbia!' they
+shouted. 'Death to Nicholas and the Albanians!' On
+hearing this Captain Brodie was discontented; he told
+me that I was a savage and did not know how to esteem an
+Englishman. 'I esteem you very much,' said I, 'and
+because he is wearing a British uniform I won't arrest
+this interpreter of yours.' (By the way, Perola was not
+acting as interpreter in our conversation, as the captain
+and I were talking French.) 'He used to be an Austrian
+agent,' said I. 'You are a liar!' cried Brodie; 'I
+know this man; he was nothing of the sort.' I remained
+calm, but I told him that he must not speak to me again
+in such a way. I asked him how long he had known
+Perola, who had got away from our prison a month ago.
+'I have known him for a month,' said Brodie. 'And
+now,' said I, 'will you please show me your documents?'
+'I have none,' said he, 'and I do not require any, as I am
+a British officer.' 'But I have read in the papers,' said
+I, 'that your people arrested and shot several persons
+who were wearing the uniform of a British officer. If
+you have no documents to prove that you are not a spy
+and that you are a British officer I shall have to arrest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
+you.' Then he showed me one with some Italian words
+on it, I think a permission to go somewhere on the Piave
+front. 'From now,' said I, 'you are arrested; no one
+can come to you and you cannot leave this house. Prepare
+yourself to start to-morrow or the day after, if you
+are tired, for Pe&#263;, and perhaps Skoplje, so that you may
+prove your identity.' He protested, and declared that
+he must see the people in the neighbouring villages. 'If
+you are a real Englishman,' said I, 'I could not allow
+you to go by yourself, since there are many Moslems in
+these parts who have been excited against England by
+their hodjas, owing to your war with Turkey. They
+might kill you, and I would be held responsible; so that
+even if you had the necessary documents I could only let
+you go if precautions were taken to guard you. I am
+sorry,' said I, 'that you should have spoken as you
+have done against the Serbs; in fact, it seems to me that
+you are doing a disservice to England, and that here in
+this village I am serving her more truly.' 'I decline
+to go to Pe&#263;,' said Brodie; 'I want to go to Scutari.'
+'You must go to Pe&#263;,' said I. He said that I could
+telephone concerning him either to the Belgrade Government
+or to the General at Cetinje. 'Unfortunately,' said
+I, 'it is these people who are with you who cut the telephone
+wires two days ago.' After this I appointed a
+guard for him. I gave him my room, with soldiers to
+serve him, to keep the room warm and bring him whatever
+food we had. [Observe that the above-mentioned
+Captain Willett Cunnington wrote in the <i>New Statesman</i>
+that Brodie was treated with "gross indignity."] 'Three
+horses were got ready,' said Ra&#269;i&#263; in conclusion, 'and on
+these they rode to Pe&#263;, accompanied by a guard, both to
+prevent them from escaping and from coming to harm.'"<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a></p>
+
+<p>In its old Albanian days the village of Gusinje was
+perhaps the most inaccessible spot in Europe&mdash;it was
+rarely possible for anyone to obtain permission to approach
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>it. Even to Miss Durham, friend of the Albanians, this
+people sent a decided refusal. But now, under the
+guidance of the Yugoslav authorities, they have abandoned
+these boorish ways; Miss Durham could go there
+at any time, but maybe the village no longer attracts
+her.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">8. A DIGRESSION ON TWO RIVAL ALBANIAN AUTHORITIES</p>
+
+<p>[We have more than once alluded to the writings of
+Miss Durham, since very few British authors have dealt
+with Albania, and she has come to be regarded as a trustworthy
+expert. But the flagrant partiality of her latest
+book (<i>Twenty Years of Balkan Tangle</i>; London, 1920),
+which, moreover, is written with great bitterness, will
+make the public turn, I hope, to Sir Charles Eliot, who
+is a vastly better cicerone. The present ambassador in
+Japan is, of course, one of the foremost men of this generation.
+His Balkan studies are as supremely competent
+as his monumental work on British Nudibranchiate
+Mollusca, published by the Ray Society when Sir Charles,
+having resigned the Governorship of East Africa, was
+Vice-Chancellor of Sheffield University. Equally admired
+are his researches into Chinese linguistics and his monograph,
+the first in the language, on that most obscure
+subject, Finnish grammar.<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> Will it be believed that in
+her account of the Balkan tangle Miss Durham does not
+quote Sir Charles Eliot, but Mr. Horatio Bottomley?
+It seems that Mr. Bottomley has not devoted much attention
+to the Balkans, since in November 1920 he poured
+the vials of his wrath upon the Serbs, who, according to
+his "latest reports from Montenegro," had destroyed no
+less than 4000 Montenegrin houses in the district of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>Dibra, a place which lies some 75 miles by road from
+the land of the Black Mountain and probably does not
+possess more than two or three Montenegrin houses;
+but he flings hard words against the Serbs, and that is
+good enough for Miss Durham. On the other hand, Sir
+Charles Eliot, who has travelled largely in Albania, wrote
+the simple facts about that people and they are obnoxious
+to this lady. "It is not surprising to find that there is
+no history of Albania, for there is no union between
+North and South, or between the different northern
+tribes and the different southern Beys," said he in 1900,
+and such a people does not undergo a fundamental change
+in twenty years. "Only two names," says Eliot, "those
+of Skanderbeg and Ali Pasha of Janina, emerge from
+the confusion of justly unrecorded tribal quarrels....
+Albania presents nothing but oppositions&mdash;North against
+South, tribe against tribe, Bey against Bey." (According
+to Miss Durham they are all aflame with the desire
+to form a nation.) "Even family ties seem to be somewhat
+weak," says Sir Charles, "for since European
+influence has diminished the African slave-trade, Albanians
+have taken to selling their female children to supply
+the want of negroes." (The Albanians are "enterprising
+and industrious," says Miss Durham.) "In many
+ways," says Eliot, "they are in Europe what the Kurds
+are in Asia. Both are wild and lawless tribes who inflict
+much damage on decent Turks and Christians alike.
+Both might be easily brought to reason by the exhibition
+of a little firmness.... Albanian patriotism is not a
+home product&mdash;had they ever been ready to combine
+against the Turk there seems to be no reason why they
+should not have preserved the same kind of independence
+as Montenegro; but from the first some of the tribes
+and clans endeavoured to secure an advantage over the
+others by siding with the invaders&mdash;papers and books
+on the national movement are written at Bucharest,
+Brussels and various Italian towns, but they are not read
+at Scutari or Janina. The stock grievance of this literature
+is that the Turks will not allow Albanian to be
+taught in the schools, and endeavour to ignore the existence
+of the language; but though the complaint is well-founded,
+I doubt if the mass of the people have much<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
+feeling on the subject." ... Those who are rash enough
+to assert, because Miss Durham says so, that in the last
+two decades the Albanians have made a progress of
+several centuries may be recommended to the testimony
+of Brailsford<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> (1906), of Katarani (1913), and of the
+Italian Press which, after the retreat of their army to
+Valona, published in 1920 the most ghastly particulars
+of what befell the hapless officers and men who were
+captured by the Albanians.</p>
+
+<p>Let the British public henceforth go to Sir Charles
+Eliot and not to this emotional lady for its picture of the
+unchanged Shqyptar. She reveals to us that more than
+one person in the Balkans said that her knowledge of
+those countries is enormous; she has knocked about
+the western Balkans and picked up a good deal of material,
+but her knowledge has its limitations: for example, she
+makes the old howler of ascribing Macedonian origin to
+Pa&#353;i&#263;, though his grandfather came not from Tetovo in
+Macedonia but from near Teteven in what is now Bulgaria.
+Miss Durham plumes herself for having sent back to
+Belgrade the Order of St. Sava, and seeing that it is
+bestowed for learning she did well. But even if her
+acquaintance with Balkan affairs were more adequate&mdash;her
+diagnosis of the Macedonian racial problem is extremely
+rough and ready&mdash;all the writings of Miss Durham
+are so warped with hatred for the Slav that they must
+be very carefully approached. Because she thinks it
+will incline her readers towards the Albanians she says<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a>
+that they were early converts to Christianity. She
+omits to mention that the Moslem, on arriving in the
+Balkans, was able to spread his religion much more
+easily in Albania than anywhere else; and again, in the
+seventeenth century, when Constantinople offered many
+lucrative posts to the Moslem there occurred in Albania
+a great wave of apostasy. Miss Durham speaks with
+pride of the Albanians who during the Great War fought
+in the French, Italian and American ranks. Would it
+not be more straightforward if she added that large
+numbers were enrolled in the Austro-Hungarian army
+and <i>gendarmerie</i>? The special task of the latter was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>to dislodge from their mountain fastnesses those Montenegrins
+who continued to carry on a desperate guerilla
+warfare against the invader. To pretend that the Albanian
+has earned the freedom of his country by his glorious
+exploits in the War is an absurdity. He is a medi&aelig;val
+fellow, much more anxious to have a head to bash than
+to ascertain whom it belongs to. The Slavs have not
+always treated their raw neighbours with indulgence;
+in the Balkan War, when their army marched through
+Albania to the sea some very discreditable incidents
+occurred, whatever may have been the provocation they
+received from the sniping natives and however great be
+the excuse of their own state of nerves. Yet the first
+stone should be flung by that army of Western Europe
+which, in its passage through the territory of a treacherous
+and savage people, has done nothing which it would not
+willingly forget. And seriously to argue that the Slavs
+are of an almost undiluted blackness, while the Albanians
+are endearing creatures, is to take what anti-feminists
+would call a feminist view of history. Miss Durham tells
+us that some years ago she stood upon a height with an
+Albanian abbot and promised him that she would do all
+that lay in her power to bring a knowledge of Albania
+to the English. The worthy abbot may have glanced at
+her uneasily, but noticing her rapt expression reassured
+himself. And she appears to have believed that England,
+eagerly absorbing what she told them of this people,
+would in August 1914 make her policy depend on their
+convenience. But to Miss Durham's horror and amazement,
+Great Britain turned aside from this clear and
+honourable duty. She entered the War as an ally of
+the Slav, bringing "shame and disgust" upon Miss
+Durham. "After that," says she, "I really did not
+care what happened. The cup of my humiliation was
+full."]</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">9. WHAT FACES THE YUGOSLAVS</p>
+
+<p>It is not as if Serbia never made mistakes in dealing
+with the Albanians. The Sultan used to govern them by
+sending in one year an army against them, and in the
+next year asking for no recruits or taxes. The Montenegrins,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
+of whom the older generation was bored when it
+had no man to shoot at, used to be on very neighbourly
+terms with them. Both these systems the Albanians
+could understand. But they did not know why the
+Belgrade Government in 1878&mdash;and it was a mistaken
+policy&mdash;should expel a number of Albanians from the
+newly-won zones, thrusting them across the frontier and
+putting in their place a number of Serbs who were settled
+in Old Serbia. The twofold folly of this plan was not
+grasped at the moment; but for several years the Serbian
+frontier districts were regularly invaded and plundered.
+The following years of Turkish misrule, and especially
+the young Turkish policy of treacherous force, which
+resulted in Albanian risings every year, may possibly have
+caused many Albanians to be honestly glad when the
+Balkan War brought the Serbs into their country. But of
+these Albanians not a few would rejoice because they
+hoped that with the help of the Serbian army it would be
+possible to slay the members of some adjacent tribe
+against whom they happened to have a feud. Perhaps
+the Serbs were so eager to bathe their horses in the
+Adriatic that they did not notice such trifles as the
+destruction of a ford, this having been done to prevent
+a visit from undesirable neighbours. One might have
+imagined that Serbia, being well known as a land of small
+peasant proprietors&mdash;where there is even a law which
+forbids a peasant's house from being sold over his head;
+he is, under any circumstances, assured of so much as will
+enable him to eke out a livelihood&mdash;one would have
+thought that the Albanian <i>&#269;if&#269;ija</i>, who is nothing more
+than a slave of the feudal chief, would have rejoiced at the
+arrival of a liberator; and indeed, while the Serbian troops
+were in Albania the peasant refused to give his lord the
+customary third or half of what the land produced, and
+after the departure of the Serbs he was unapproachable
+for tax-collectors. Who knows whether this social readjustment,
+so auspiciously begun, might not have made
+Albania wipe out her grievances against the Serbs and
+remember only that in the Imperial days of Du&#353;an, even
+if he was not of the most ancient Balkan race, there was
+prosperity and happiness where now is desolation; busy
+merchants in the seaport towns of Albania, which now<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
+are ruins; ships sailing in from Venice with the luxuries
+of all the world and taking back with them all those good
+things, a half of which Albania has forgotten how to
+make? And after that there had been times of friendship
+with the Serb&mdash;Dositej Obradovi&#263;, the philologist (one of
+those amiable persons who invented for the Albanians
+an alphabet), tells us, for instance, how in his travels
+through Albania he was assured by natives that they and
+the Serbs lived together as if they were members of one
+family, while the Ku&#263;i in eastern Montenegro had, by a
+gradual process of assimilation, become transformed from
+Catholic Albanians into Orthodox Montenegrins. It is
+told that in the wondrous hours when the <i>&#269;if&#269;ija</i> gloried
+in the soil he was about to win, even the notoriously
+wild Klementi, filled with hunger for the land, ran down
+from their fastnesses. But, most unfortunately, at that
+moment the Great Powers decided that Albania was to
+be an autonomous, hereditary State. This interrupted
+the movement towards reconciliation with Serbia; and
+even now the Serbs will be told by many encouraging
+people that in their efforts to win the regard of Albanians
+they have an impossible task, that if some of them take
+a step towards you one day they will rush back a dozen
+on the day after. These people will repeat the legend that
+the Albanians have an invincible hatred for the Slavs;
+but the Albanians have not forgotten how, in the course
+of the Middle Ages, they were willingly open to Slav
+penetration&mdash;the Serbian language reached to beyond
+Alessio, the small Albanian dynasties intermarried with
+Slav ruling families, so that they preferred to speak
+Serbian, and down to this day two-thirds of the place-names
+of northern Albania are of Slav origin. One of
+the most important documents in this connection is a
+letter from the town of Dubrovnik to the Emperor Sigismund
+in the year 1434. They inform the Emperor that
+Andria Topia, lord of the Albanian coast, has secretaries
+who know nothing but the Serbian language and alphabet.
+Thus when the Emperor sends him letters in Latin he is
+obliged to have them translated elsewhere, and the contents
+of the Imperial letters are not kept secret. So the
+Emperor was forced to write to Topia in Serbian....
+Long memories are not always inconvenient, and Albanian<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
+memories are long because, until recent years, all that
+they knew came from tradition&mdash;Austria and Italy had
+not yet become so concerned about Albanian education
+that (forgetting their own illiterates in Bosnia and
+Calabria) the two Allies waved into existence boys' and
+girls' schools up and down the country; so desirous
+were they that these founts of knowledge should be
+patronized that both Italians and Austrians were prepared
+to pay good money and eke a supply of garments and a
+gaily-coloured picture of King or Emperor, as the case
+might be; and with respect to the cash, not only was
+each willing to pay but to pay more than the other. Yet
+the Albanian is most mindful of tradition, and he is aware
+that his approach to the Slav in the Middle Ages was
+blocked by the inopportune arrival of the Turks; it is in
+the nature of man that the Albanian was more impressed
+by the brilliant young States of the early princes, with
+that barbarically sumptuous residence at Scutari (the
+Catholics of Scutari also being in the diocese of Antivari,
+which was under Serb domination) than, centuries later,
+when he found himself confronted with the pitiable
+population of Old Serbia.</p>
+
+<p>In the Sandjak the task of Yugoslavia will be relatively
+simple; the Albanians who live there are not
+autochthonous, but arrived at the beginning of the
+eighteenth century on the plateau of Pechter. These
+Klementi&mdash;then very numerous&mdash;cared nothing for their
+Serbian origin, so that the Patriarch of Pe&#263; had to protect
+himself against them by means of a janissary guard&mdash;which
+the Sultan permitted him to maintain at his own
+expense&mdash;whereas they were attentive to the teachings of
+their religion, in so far as they obeyed the Catholic
+missionaries who dwelt among them and requested that
+in their forays they should confine themselves to
+Muhammedan and Orthodox booty. One of the places
+they attacked was Plav, from which they drove the
+population, and themselves henceforward took to living
+on the fertile fields in summer, while they spent the winter
+in some mountain caverns. But after seven years a large
+proportion of this tribe went back to its ancestral stronghold
+in the Brdo range, from which the Turks had transplanted
+them to the Sandjak. This wish of theirs to go<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
+to their old home was gratified after they had beaten off
+the Turks triumphantly in various engagements on the
+way, and even pursued them to their trenches.... The
+Klementi who had stayed on the Pechter were further
+depleted a few years later, when their kinsfolk, answering
+the appeal of the Archbishop of Antivari, <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'irode'">rode</ins> up there
+and carried off fifty families who were on the eve of
+renouncing their religion. The final group which remained
+became Moslem, and with such ardour that when
+the Serbs of Kara George reached the Sandjak they found
+that these Klementi were completely Islamized; they
+resisted the Serbian army with the utmost resolution.
+Subsequently they attempted to convert the Serbian
+population round them, but with mediocre success, for
+the Klementi themselves were not too strong; moreover,
+they were isolated from the other Muhammedan Albanians.</p>
+
+<p>And yet certain incidents which occurred in the
+Sandjak during the Great War seem to show that even
+there the task of dealing with the population is a troublous
+one. They are conservative; one sees, for example, a
+woman who has got up very early holding aloft a vessel
+against the sun. This is done with the object of preventing
+the cows of a certain man from giving any milk.
+But the man is on the alert. He shoots the vessel out
+of her hand and proceeds, with an easy mind, about
+his business. Frequently the Austrians disarmed these
+men, but it is their practice to have more rifles than
+shirts, although during the occupation a rifle cost twenty
+napoleons. It occurred to the Austrian Governor-General
+of Montenegro, Lieut. Field-Marshal von Weber,
+that these Albanians were children and, if treated well,
+would make useful volunteers. A party of them was
+thereupon sent to Graz, where they were told that they
+would be trained to fight on behalf of the Sultan. Their
+military education was a trifle agitated&mdash;for instance,
+on their second day at Graz they thrashed their officers&mdash;but
+when their training was considered adequate they
+were sent to the front, and there they immediately
+surrendered to the Italians. This was not the first time
+that a body of Albanians had gone to Austria. In 1912,
+for the Eucharistic Congress at Vienna, some two dozen
+of them, in their national costume and conducted by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
+their priests, had taken part in the procession. It is
+said that the financier Rosenberg, of whom one has
+heard, bore a portion of the pretty large expenses of the
+deputation. His title of baron dates from this period.
+Austria's work among the school-children was no more
+successful than among the adults. Remembering that
+just outside Zadar lies Arbanasi, or Borgo Erizzo, a
+village of 2500 inhabitants, nearly all of whom are
+Albanians, it seemed good to the Austrian authorities
+to procure from that place a schoolmaster who would
+make suitable propaganda. There was at Arbanasi a
+teachers' institute, as also an Italian "Liga" school
+which was closed by the Austrians during the War, and
+when the schoolmaster arrived at Plav, where the people
+speak Serbian, he set about teaching the children Albanian
+and also making propaganda for Italy, as he was from the
+"Liga" school.... That fidelity of the five hundred
+men of Plav who clung, as we have related, to their
+religion, had its pendant when the Austrians were engaged
+in constructing a road. The custom was for a potentate
+of that district to procure for the Austrians a sufficient
+number of men, to whom three or four crowns a day
+would be paid. Any man who disregarded the potentate's
+summons was thrashed by him, and thrashed in such a
+way that for three days he was prostrate. The late
+Chief of Police at Sarajevo, Mr. Ljescovac, was (being a
+Bosnian subject) administering this district during the
+Austrian occupation. He tried frequently to get particulars
+from the men who had been so mercilessly flogged,
+with a view to opening an inquiry. Their invariable
+answer was: "I know nothing."</p>
+
+<p>In the days of Charles, another member of the Topia
+family, a copyist, who was in his service, was transcribing
+the Chronicle of George Hamartolos, and twice, thinking
+of his master, he inserts: "God, help Charles Topia."
+As we leave the Serb and the Albanian face to face,
+sensitive, imaginative, tenacious people, both with very
+ancient claims, we must hope that a happy solution
+will be found. After all Serbia, being in Yugoslavia, is
+now a Muhammedan and a Catholic Power. She has
+men at her disposal, such as Major Musakadi&#263;, a Bosnian
+Moslem who deserted from the Austrian army to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
+Serbs, fought with them on several fronts and received
+the highest decoration for valour, the Kara George; then,
+after the War, he was sent by the Government to command
+at Br&#263;ko, a place in his native Bosnia where there is a
+Moslem majority. A few of the Orthodox protested
+energetically that they would not have a Moslem over
+them; they were received by the Minister of Justice
+in Belgrade. "Gentlemen," said he, "go back to Br&#263;ko
+and when anyone of you has earned the Cross of Kara
+George I shall be glad to see him here again." ... As
+in the old days, the Serbian civilization is far superior,
+but this is not everything; that the Albanian is ready
+to meet it with peace or war he shows clearly as he glides
+along in his white skull-cap, his close-fitting white and
+black costume, with his panther-like tread and with
+several weapons and an umbrella.</p>
+
+<p>But for the various reasons to which we have alluded
+he is now much more inclined to live in peace with the
+Yugoslav. Very differently, except if they are charged
+with gifts, does he receive the Italians; even at the
+moment of accepting their gifts of military material and
+cash he regards them with a more or less concealed
+derision, for he is impressed, as we have pointed out, by
+nothing so much as by military prowess and the reverse,
+whereof the news is carried far and wide. At the end
+of September and beginning of October 1918 two weak
+Yugoslav battalions of about a thousand rifles accomplished
+at Tirana what the large Italian forces could
+not, at any rate did not, achieve. Ten thousand Austrians
+were in the town, and for three months the Italians had
+sat down outside it. Then the Serbs descended on the
+place from the mountains; their carts came by the
+ordinary road, and on arriving at the Italian lines the
+drivers asked for hay; but when they explained that
+the rest of their force was going round by the mountain
+trail the Italian commandant refused to give any supplies
+to such liars. (Later on, though, he gave them sufficient
+for five days.) When an Austrian officer who was
+stationed in a minaret saw the Serbs coming down from
+those terrible heights he was so astonished that he felt
+sure they must be robbers. And after they had captured
+the town and the Italians conducted themselves as if it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
+were they who had conquered it, the Serbs took to
+thrashing their allies and ejecting them from the caf&eacute;s.
+The Italians did not protest....</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">10. DR. TRUMBI&#262;'S PROPOSAL</p>
+
+<p>To sum up this part of our long and, I fear, rather
+tiring dissertation on the Yugoslav-Albanian frontier that
+is to be: the Yugoslav delegates at the Peace Conference
+invariably disclaimed any desire to have Albanian lands
+conferred on them against the wish of the inhabitants.
+According to Prince Sixte of Parma, the ex-Emperor
+Karl was disposed to offer to the Serbs as a basis of peace
+a Southern Slav kingdom consisting of Serbia, Montenegro,
+Bosnia, Herzegovina and the whole of Albania. But
+this last item only made it clear that in his brief tenure
+of the throne the Emperor had grasped something of the
+grand generosity of European statesmen when they deal
+with the possessions of other people in the Near East.
+The Albanians are not Southern Slavs, and it is merely
+the voice of the thoughtless mob in Montenegro which has
+been claiming Scutari for the reason that they held it in
+the Middle Ages&mdash;several of their rulers are buried there&mdash;and
+because 20,000 Montenegrins gave their lives to take
+it in the Balkan War. Responsible persons in Yugoslavia,
+such as Dr. Trumbi&#263;, the former Foreign Minister, do not
+believe that Scutari is a necessity for their State&mdash;whether
+Yugoslavia is a necessity for Scutari is another question&mdash;and
+they hold that it is quite possible to preserve the 1913
+frontier (perhaps with a minor rectification in Klementi)
+and live in friendship with their neighbours. This, of
+course, is under the assumption that these neighbours
+will "play the game"&mdash;and it is just this which the
+Albanians will be unable to do if they are left to their own
+slender resources. How could one expect so poor&mdash;or
+shall we say so unexploited?&mdash;a country to make any
+social progress without the help of others? It has become
+the habit of many Albanians to accept financial assistance
+from Italy; if an independent Albania is now established
+these subsidies will be increased&mdash;and he who pays the
+piper calls the tune. If, however, an arrangement could
+be made for helping the Albanians&mdash;and the country<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
+undertaking this would have to be devoid of Balkan
+ambitions on its own account&mdash;then the 1913 frontier
+would be possible. No doubt the cynics will say that
+the Yugoslavs are aware that this is an unlikely solution,
+and that failing a disinterested Power, whose supervision
+would cause the Albanians during the troublesome civilizing
+process to be moderately peaceable neighbours,
+failing such a Power the Yugoslavs would feel that they
+were justified in asking for the frontier of the Drin. But
+this frontier I have heard advocated less by Yugoslavs of
+any standing than by those Albanians who despair of
+the administrative capacities of their fellow-countrymen.
+The Yugoslavs have not the smallest wish to add to their
+commitments, and even if all the Albanians on the right
+bank of the Drin were anxious for Yugoslav overlordship&mdash;and
+this, naturally, is not the case&mdash;there would be serious
+hostility to be expected from some of those on the other
+bank. If no disinterested Power, such as Great Britain
+or Sweden, will take the matter in hand, then Dr. Trumbi&#263;
+has an alternative proposal, which is for a free, independent
+Albania (with the 1913 frontier) which would exist on the
+Customs and on a loan made by the Great Powers, who
+would put in a Controller charged with seeing that the
+money were spent on roads, schools, etc. A police force,
+and not an army, would be maintained; while, if need
+be, the country could be neutralized; and Dr. Trumbi&#263;,
+within whose lifetime bandits and heiduks were roaming
+through Bosnia, believes that the Albanians would
+gradually discard their cherished system of feuds....
+This would be the happiest solution, for it would leave
+the Balkans to the Balkan peoples, while it would aim at
+the development of whatever good qualities there are in the
+Albanians, and it would definitely recognize a Yugoslav-Albanian
+frontier which is acceptable to both countries.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">11. THE POSITION IN 1921: THE TIRANA GOVERNMENT
+AND THE MIRDITI</p>
+
+<p>While Europe in the year 1921 was either exhausted
+or belligerent, or both, she had a vague knowledge that
+hostilities were being carried on between the Serbs and the
+Albanians. Telegrams from Rome, Tirana and elsewhere<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
+appeared in the papers, saying that the Serbs continued to
+advance. Occasionally a Serbian statesman would declare
+that his Government desired the independence of Albania.
+Then some Albanian delegate in Geneva would make a
+protest and ask the League of Nations, of which Albania
+was now a member, to take this matter in hand. A
+Serbian delegate would also address the League. Again
+you would hear of the Serbian army pushing forward,
+that a good many soldiers had fallen. And no one seemed
+to know why the Serbs would want to shed their blood
+in order to add to their miscellaneous problems this very
+grave one of administering such a region inhabited by
+such a people. Why did they not content themselves
+with the frontier which the Powers temporarily assigned
+to them in 1918 and which, from the junction of the
+Black and White Drin, runs south along the rocky right
+bank of the river and then, crossing to the other side,
+passes along the top of a range of mountains? What
+more could they wish to have, presuming that it was not
+their intention to annex what lay between them and the
+Adriatic?</p>
+
+<p>Well, it appears that never once did they go beyond
+the aforementioned line to which they were legally entitled,
+except when for a short time they were in pursuit, towards
+Ljuria, of certain invaders. Not only were they legally
+entitled to take up their position on the mountains to the
+west of the Black Drin, but the Moslem tribes, the Malizi
+and the Ljuri, who dwell in that uninviting district, were
+most anxious that the Serbs should come and should
+remain. For this the tribes had two principal reasons:
+in the first place, they recognized that their compatriots
+in Djakovica and Prizren were immeasurably better off
+than before they came under Serbian rule; and secondly,
+they did not wish to be separated from these towns which
+are their markets. In fact, they had become so anxious
+to throw in their lot with the Slavs that they formed
+six battalions, which operated on both banks of the river,
+under the command of Bairam Ramadan, Mahmoud
+Rejeb and others. In opposition to these battalions were
+the troops of the so-called National Government, that of
+Tirana. This Government is repudiated by a great many
+Albanians on account of its reactionary methods, its subservience<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
+to the Italians, and its failure to do anything
+for the people. The battalions, then, were engaged in
+1921, not against their immediate neighbours to the west,
+the Catholic Mirditi, of whom we shall speak anon, but
+against the more distant Government of Tirana. Thus
+the League of Nations beheld that the administration
+which they were about to confirm as the legitimate
+Government of Albania was violently opposed by compact
+masses of Catholics and Moslems. Perhaps some of the
+members of the League began to doubt whether they
+should have accepted the assurance of the Anglo-Albanian
+Society that the Tirana Government (containing Moslem,
+Catholic and Orthodox members) was really a national
+affair; perhaps they began to suspect that the two
+Christian elements were only there to throw a little dust
+in the eyes of Europe; and perhaps Lord Robert Cecil
+began to feel doubtful whether, at the urgent request of
+his friend Mr. Aubrey Herbert, President of the Anglo-Albanian
+Society, he had been well advised to bring
+about the admission into the League of a country which
+had two simultaneous Governments before it had a
+frontier. Perhaps one was beginning to recognize that
+there are Albanians but no Albania.</p>
+
+<p>The emissaries of Tirana might depict as of no importance
+the hostilities that were being waged against
+them by those Moslem tribes, they might tell the League
+of Nations that the Mirdite revolution was not worth
+considering. It is a fact that the Mirditi are not very
+numerous, but in close connection with their 18,000 people
+are the Shala with 500 houses and the Shoshi with 300.
+Tradition has it that they are descended from three
+brothers who set out from the arid village of Shiroka on
+Lake Scutari to seek their fortune. The most ancient,
+the most noble and important family of northern Albania
+is that of Gjomarkaj, whose seat is at Oroshi, the capital
+of the Mirditi. Despite enormous difficulties they succeeded
+in maintaining their own position and the prestige
+of the Mirditi. They refused to recognize the Turkish
+Government and clung so tenaciously to their own usages
+and laws, and were so famous for their courage that
+the Sultans were eager to grant them privileges and
+concessions. Thereafter they promised to assist the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
+Sultan against external aggression, and always did so
+with great success. It was due to the Mirditi that the
+Albanian mountaineers preserved their nationality, their
+religion and their customs, for they were ever the leaders
+of the other Albanian tribes. The most prominent of
+the Mirditi in our time have been Prenk Bib Doda, who,
+after long years of exile, was assassinated in Albania; Mark
+Djoni, now the President of the Mirdite Republic; and,
+above all, the great Abbot Monsignor Primo Doci, a man
+of vast culture, who returned to his own country after
+serving the Vatican as a diplomat in various parts of
+the world. It is not surprising that the educational
+standard of his native land filled him with the determination
+to build schools and that, owing to his efforts, the
+Roman Catholic establishment of thirty native priests and
+of bishops who were nearly all foreigners has developed
+into a body of almost three hundred native priests with no
+foreign bishops. A poet himself, he founded the literary
+society, <i>Bashkimi l'unione</i>, in which all capable patriots
+were invited to collaborate. He constructed more than
+twenty strongholds in and around Oroshi, and when he
+died in February 1917 it was largely owing to the persecution
+which he suffered at the hands of the Austrians.
+What has latterly aroused his faithful people is the
+persecution levelled at them by the Moslem-Italian
+Government of Tirana.</p>
+
+<p>A certain amount of mystery envelopes the death of
+Bib Doda; an opinion widely held is that Italians were
+responsible, but Mr. H.&nbsp;E. Goad rebukes me in the
+<i>Fortnightly Review</i> for not knowing that the Italians laid
+aside the crude methods of political murder centuries ago.
+Perhaps he doesn't regard the massacre of the helpless
+French soldiers at Rieka in 1919 as political murder,
+since they were only privates; perhaps he doesn't count
+that famous expedition of the five lieutenants to
+assassinate Zanella, because it was unsuccessful; but he
+may be right concerning Bib Doda. That personage had
+been to Durazzo to confer with the Italians; he had
+refused to accept an Italian protectorate in Albania, and
+on his return he was killed in his carriage before he could
+reach Scutari. The chief assailant was a Catholic of
+Klementi, believed to be an adherent of Essad Pasha and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
+also an Italian "agent d'occasion." Yet as several
+Italian soldiers who accompanied Bib Doda were wounded
+it would seem that those, myself included, who believed
+that this affair had been arranged by the Italians were
+wrong.</p>
+
+<p>As for Bib Doda's fortune, Mr. Goad asserts that by
+Albanian law he did not have to leave it to his nearest
+kinsman, Marko Djoni. That is, I beg to say, precisely
+what he had to do according to the custom of their ancient
+family. Mr. Goad says that the cash went to the poor;
+I say that a good deal of it went into the pocket of a lady
+who was much younger than the dead man and was on
+excellent terms with an Italian major. If Mr. Goad had
+visited Albania at that time and had been interested in
+other things besides what he tells us of&mdash;the moonlight
+of Klisura and the splendid plane trees over the Vouissa
+and the sunrise reflected on the gleaming mountain-wall
+of the Nemorica&mdash;I would not have to tell him all this
+about Bib Doda's money. He says that Marko Djoni is
+a discredited, disgruntled person who became a tool of
+the Serbs and fled to Serbia. But he forgets that Bib
+Doda was killed in March 1919, and that until May 1921
+Marko Djoni remained in Albania, enjoying the friendship
+of Italy rather than that of Serbia. In fact it was not
+easy for him to abandon this friendship, owing to various
+deals in connection with the Mirdite forests. No doubt
+he resented the loss of his heritage; but why in the name
+of goodness should not he and his followers fight for their
+liberty, and why should the Serbs not help them at a time
+when the frontiers of Albania had not been fixed nor the
+Government officially recognized? The Serbs were helping
+him to make war, says Mr. Goad, against his legitimate
+rulers. Yet we must be lenient with our Mr. Goad,
+for he himself admits that "few can write of Balkan
+politics without revealing symptoms of that partisan
+disease." He has made up his mind that the Serbs are the
+villains of the piece, and there, for him, is the end of it.</p>
+
+<p>A delegation from the Mirditi, consisting of the
+Rev. Professor Anthony Achikou and Captain Dod
+Ll&eacute;che, came to Geneva in October 1921, and requested
+the League not to issue a confirmation of the Tirana
+Government. They showed that this Government had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
+no other aim than to turn Albania into a small Turkey.
+No doubt the Moslems, as the most numerous element,
+had a right to have a majority in the Cabinet, but there
+was no justification in their appointment of pure Turks.
+(The Tirana Government proposed in the autumn of 1921
+that any Albanian coming from Turkey, who has held a
+public office there, shall be refused admittance into
+the Albanian Administration until two years after his
+return. This is a proposal but not yet, I believe, an
+effective law.) The Minister of Justice has been old
+Hodja Kadri, and the Minister of War one Salah el Din
+Bey, an officer of Kemal Pasha, and neither of these
+was acquainted with the Albanian language. When the
+Mirditi started to show their dislike of this Government,
+the War Minister commanded his troops to slay without
+mercy anyone who dared to raise his voice. Thus it
+came about that the villages of Oroshi, Laci, Gomsice and
+Naraci were destroyed, while those of the inhabitants
+who could escape fled across the frontier to Serbia. As
+for particular cases of iniquity we may instance that of
+the Moslem officer, Chakir Nizami, who, as a manifestation
+of his hatred for the Christians, had violated at
+Scutari a girl of fourteen whose name was Chakya Hil
+Paloks. He was sentenced by the French military
+authorities and was liberated by the Minister of Justice as
+soon as the French had quitted Scutari. On the other
+hand, Kol Achikou, a brother of the delegate, had killed
+a Moslem in self-defence and been acquitted by the
+French court martial; after their departure he was
+taken to Tirana and sentenced to death. But apart
+from all such misdeeds the Mirditi complained that the
+Tirana Government, which could not openly wage war
+with Serbia, had organized the "Kossovo" Committee,
+whose object it was to foment trouble in Serbia and to
+send armed bands of marauders on to Serbian territory.
+At the very moment when the delegation was at Geneva,
+one of these bands (in the night between October 12 and
+13) raided the village of Moji&#353;te, near Gostivar. Furnished
+with Italian machine guns and bombs they came over
+the mountains, set fire to the village and killed many of
+the people as they fled. They are accustomed on such
+expeditions to steal the children and hold them to ransom&mdash;a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
+lucrative operation which d'Annunzio's arditi<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a> may
+have copied from their Albanian colleagues. It would
+seem, then, according to the statement of the Mirditi,
+that in the conflict on the Black Drin, of which Europe
+had vaguely heard, the Tirana Government and not that
+of Serbia was the aggressor. Mr. Aubrey Herbert may
+write pathetic letters to the Press, Miss Durham may
+write letters of indignation, but how could their prot&eacute;g&eacute;s
+of Tirana be said to be valiantly defending themselves
+against the wicked Serbs when the very villages which,
+said Mr. Herbert, were destroyed&mdash;Aras and Dardha and
+so forth&mdash;were situated in the district to which the Serbs
+were legally entitled?</p>
+
+<p>The Mirditi delegates had an interview in Geneva
+with Lord Robert Cecil. An attempt was made by the
+Tirana delegates to discredit Professor Achikou, by
+publishing a telegram from Monsignor Sereggi, the Archbishop
+of Scutari (but which the Professor accused the
+rival delegate, the bearded, bustling Father Fan Noli,
+of having composed himself),<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> and in that message it
+was stated that Achikou was expelled from Albania.
+This he did not deny; he was, he said, one of 4000 who
+had been driven out by an arbitrary Government and he
+hoped that they would soon be able to return. The
+message called Achikou a traitor; but that is a matter
+of opinion. It said that he was in the service of a
+foreign Power; he replied that the Mirditi had never
+concealed their wish to live in friendship with their
+neighbours, and the proof that they envisaged nothing
+more than friendship was that they were petitioning the
+League to recognize the Mirdite Republic. Among the
+other charges against Achikou was one which said that
+he was sailing under false colours. This was an absurd
+accusation, and one which enabled the reverend Father
+to mention that his opponent Monsignor, who was then
+being called Bishop, Fan Noli, was neither a bishop nor
+an Albanian, but a simple priest, a Greek from Adrianople,
+whose real name was Theophanus.<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> This clever man,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>who had decided to form an Orthodox Albanian Church
+and had apparently become its bishop without the
+formality of consecration, had enjoyed some success at
+Geneva owing to his knowledge of languages. He circulated
+a telegram from Tirana which purported to be a
+disavowal of the Mirditi delegation by a number of
+Mirditi notables; but a reply was sent by Mark Djoni,
+the President of the Mirdite Republic, an elderly man of
+great sagacity and experience, for in Turkish times he
+had been chief magistrate of the Mirditi. He pointed
+out that all the notables and all the tribal chieftains had
+gone, like himself, into exile, and that the names were
+those of insignificant persons who had acted under fear
+of death. Djoni did not in this telegram allude to the
+position of those Catholic priests and others in northern
+Albania who support the Tirana Government and its
+Italian paymasters; some of them may believe that
+they are acting in the interest of their country&mdash;to act
+otherwise would be perilous, and everyone seems to know
+the precise number of napoleons a month&mdash;ranging from
+the 150 of an ecclesiastical magnate down to 7&frac12; (the pay
+of a simple gendarme)&mdash;which they are alleged to receive.
+Do they ever think of the starving Italian peasants?</p>
+
+<p>On October 7 another telegram was sent from Oroshi
+(the capital of the Mirditi) to the Tirana Delegation
+which "protested energetically against the activities of
+a certain Anthony Achikou." Yet, on October 9, an
+individual called Notz Pistuli, who had travelled specially
+from Scutari, presented himself at the Mirdite delegates'
+hotel, and in the name of the Scutari National Council
+asked whether a reconciliation could not be made between
+the Mirditi and the Tirana Government.<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> Being told
+that the Mirditi would have nothing to do with the
+Turkish Government of Tirana, he held out hopes that
+another Government more representative of Albania
+would soon be constituted. It was remarkable that
+Tirana should have dispatched this envoy after giving
+out that the Mirditi were traitors and that their delegates
+represented nobody.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Robert Cecil did not at first seem to think that
+their desire for a republic independent of Tirana could be
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>gratified, but on being initiated into the facts of the
+case and told that definitely to reject them would look
+as if he were a foe to Christianity, Lord Robert said
+that such was far from being the case. He would do
+whatever he could to help them. And on the next day
+it was decided that, in accordance with the Mirdite
+request, a Commission should proceed to Albania.</p>
+
+<p>The Italian delegate, Marquis Imperiali, submitted
+that there was no need to hurry this Commission and
+Monsieur Djoni explained in a telegram<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> that if the
+Commission went forthwith it would discover in Albania
+cannons, rifles and other war material from Italy, that
+it would find numerous Turkish officers of the Kemalist
+army who had been brought from Asia Minor in Italian
+ships, and that it would perceive that the cannons, the
+Turkish Government of Tirana, the rifles, the Turkish
+officers, certain Catholic ecclesiastics&mdash;in a word, the
+whole of Albania such as it is to-day is nothing else, said
+he, but a masked Italian instrument of war against
+Serbia&mdash;while all the bloody consequences of this perpetual
+struggle have to be endured by the border population....
+One afternoon, at the beginning of November,
+650 Tirana soldiers, pursued by the Mirditi, gave themselves
+up to the Serbian authorities on the Black Drin.
+They had with them a dozen officers of whom two were
+Italians, and these accounted for themselves by saying
+that they had come out to organize and to lead the
+Albanian army.</p>
+
+
+<p style="padding-top: 1.5em">Now, would this be the best solution of the Albanian
+problem, that the Mirdite Republic and that of Tirana
+should both be recognized, since it is quite clear that it
+would be immoral&mdash;and very useless&mdash;for Europe to try
+to persuade the Mirditi to place themselves under the
+Tirana r&eacute;gime? But there appears to be no doubt
+that the Moslems of northern Albania&mdash;however much
+they may now sympathize with the Mirditi in their
+attitude towards Tirana&mdash;would just as strenuously resist
+their own incorporation in a Christian Republic....
+Down at the bottom of their hearts all the Albanian
+delegates who came to Geneva must know that if an
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>Albanian State is larger than one tribe it will go to pieces.
+Whatever good qualities may be latent in the Albanian,
+he is as yet&mdash;with rare exceptions&mdash;in that stage of culture
+which has no idea of duty on the part of the State or of
+duty towards the State. As an example of his views on
+the exercise of authority we may instance the case of the
+82 Albanians, led by Islam Aga Batusha (of the village
+of Voksha), who stopped Pouni&#353;a Ra&#269;i&#263; and his companions
+in the summer of 1921 while they were riding one
+day from Djakovica to Pe&#263;. Pouni&#353;a enjoys the fullest
+confidence of the border tribes because he has never been
+known to break his word; they are very conscious that
+even their vaunted "besa" is not nowadays observed
+as it was, say fifty years ago, for the Austrian and Italian
+propaganda schools have had an unfortunate effect.
+Well, as the 82 sat round Pouni&#353;a and his friends in the
+courtyard of a mosque, where they spent the whole day
+confabulating, they said they hoped that he, a just and
+wise man, would help them; and their principal grievance
+was that the Serbian police no longer allowed them to kill
+each other. Why should the police interfere in their
+private affairs? Recently the police had arrested a man
+whom one of these protesters wanted to kill, and therefore
+he thought he would have to kill one of the police. Even
+those who have spent their lives in Serbia are too often
+at this stage of development&mdash;a few years ago, in the
+village of Prokuplje, an Albanian assassinated his neighbour
+and was sentenced to twenty years' penal servitude.
+The judge asked the dead man's brother if he was satisfied.
+"No, I am not," he answered, "because now I shall
+have to wait twenty years to kill him." Their ancient
+custom of blood-vengeance continues to flourish, though
+in Serbia the police and public opinion are against it;
+thus, at Luka, in the department of Pe&#263;, one Alil Mahmoud
+was murdered by a Berisha to avenge his uncle, so that
+now the sons of this Mahmoud propose to kill a Berisha&mdash;not
+the murderer, but one equal in rank to their late
+father, and in consequence Ahmed Beg, son of Murtezza
+Pasha, of Djakovica, is afraid to leave his house, which
+the Serbian police, at his request, is guarding.</p>
+
+<p>How much the Albanian conceives that he owes a
+duty to the State may be instanced by the application of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
+a smuggler that he be granted a permit to go to Zagreb
+in order to dispose of 6000 oka<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> of tobacco which he had
+brought over the frontier. He was talking to a Serb
+who has the confidence of the Albanians because he does
+not treat them as if they were Serbs; and when this
+father confessor advised him to get rid of the tobacco
+locally (which he succeeded in doing) the Albanian
+objected that the excise officers gave him constant
+anxiety, they were thieves who insisted on payment
+being made to them if they came across his merchandise.
+And if it be said that this is too humble a case, we may
+mention that of Ali Riza, one of the chief officers of the
+Tirana army which was last year operating against the
+Serbs. So indifferent is he as to the uniform he bears that
+the year before last, in Vienna, he begged an influential
+Serb to recommend him for a lieutenancy in the Serbian
+army. (His request was not granted because it was
+ascertained that, besides being unable to read and write,
+his work as an Austrian gendarme had been more zealous
+than creditable.)</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">12. SERBIA'S GOOD INFLUENCE</p>
+
+<p>What, then, is Europe to do with these wild children
+of hers?... The tribes, Catholic and Moslem, who
+dwell between the Big Drin and the frontier allotted to
+Serbia in 1913, asked the aforesaid Pouni&#353;a in 1919 to
+intervene in their quarrels; and the result was that a
+small number of Serbian soldiers were scattered about
+that country. They were placed at the disposal of the
+chief, whom they assisted in maintaining order. (Needless
+to say, they collected no taxes or recruits, and all
+their supplies came to them from Serbia.) The people
+were impressed not only by the uniform but by the
+men's conduct. Before going to these posts&mdash;where
+they were relieved every two or three months&mdash;the men
+were instructed with regard to Albanian customs, and
+no case occurred of any transgression. So rigidly did
+they enforce the precept that anyone who tried to violate
+or carry off a woman was, if he persisted, to be shot, that
+last year, at Tropolje in Gashi, when the girl in question
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>was said to be not unwilling, they pursued the abductors,
+and in the subsequent battle there were fatalities on
+both sides. The Serbian soldiers, for whose safety the
+village was responsible, made themselves so popular that
+when the Tirana Government appointed one Niman Feriz
+to go to those parts as sub-prefect he was chased away
+by the people headed by the mayor of the Krasnichi, who
+is a nephew of Bairam Beg Zur, the illiterate ex-brigand
+and ex-Minister of War of the Tirana Government.</p>
+
+<p>Let this system of small Serbian posts be extended
+over the whole of northern Albania, that is to say, in those
+districts where the natives are willing to receive them.
+After all, the Serbs understand these neighbours of theirs.
+Telephones and roads will be built and eventually the
+railway along the Drin. The northern Albanians will
+then, for the first time, be on the high-road towards peace
+and prosperity; and if the rest of Albania has by then
+attained to anything like this condition everybody would
+be glad to see a free and independent Albania.</p>
+
+<p>Now what prospect is there of the rest of Albania
+taking any analogous steps? If the regions which at
+present submit to Tirana decline to modify their methods,
+it would seem that warfare between them and their
+kinsmen to the north and north-east must continue, and
+that the foundations of a united, free Albania will not
+yet be laid. One might presume, from their bellicose
+attitude, that the Tirana Government (extending to and
+including the town of Scutari) is all against a pacific
+solution; and if one argues that their attitude would be
+quite different without the support they receive from
+Italy, then the Italians would doubtless reply that they
+have as much right to assist the Tirana Albanians as
+Yugoslavia has to assist those of the north.</p>
+
+<p>But this is not the case. Between Italy and the
+Albanians there are no such ancient political and economic
+ties as between the Albanians and the Serbs. The
+medi&aelig;val connection with Venice has left with many
+Albanians a dolorous memory, for apart from the fact
+that Venice, as in Dalmatia, was pursuing a merely selfish
+policy, it was directly due to her that the Turkish Sultan,
+in the fifteenth century, was able to establish himself
+in Albania. Thrice his troops had been repelled by those<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
+of Skanderbeg when the arrangement was made for
+them to enter the fortress of Rosafat in Venetian uniforms,
+and then four hundred years elapsed before the Sultan's
+standard was pulled down. In recent times the Government
+of Italy has been furnishing the Shqyptart with
+schools, and these were not its only acts of benevolence
+towards that wretched people. They have given schools
+and rifles and munitions and gold. The Albanians were
+willing to accept this largesse; but that it forged a link
+between patron and client, that it conferred on the
+Italians any rights to occupy the country, they denied,
+and enforced this denial in 1920 at the point of the bayonet.
+Mr. H. Goad said in the <i>Fortnightly Review</i> that this
+remark of mine is quite unhistorical, since Italy, says he,
+"was in course of withdrawal when certain Albanians,
+stirred up as usual by Jugo-Slavs, attacked her retreating
+troops." If the Albanians had only known that Italy,
+despite her having been, says Mr. Goad, "supremely
+useful to Albania," had resolved to quit, they would
+perhaps have let them go with dignity. But if Mr.
+Goad will read some of the contemporary Italian newspapers
+he will see that my allusion to the bayonet was
+much too mild. Utterly regardless of the fact that the
+Italian evacuation was "according to plan," the Shqyptart
+treated them abominably&mdash;it brought up memories
+of Abyssinia&mdash;or does Mr. Goad deny that even a general
+officer was outraged and blew out his brains? This
+Albanian onslaught was so far from being stirred up by
+the Yugoslavs that, as we have seen,<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> the Belgrade
+Government refused to furnish them with munitions.
+This is not to say that they did not approve of the Albanian
+push, for they maintain, in spite of Mr. Goad, the principle
+of "The Balkans for the Balkan Peoples." If Italy, as our
+strange publicist asserts, has a mandate&mdash;presumably a
+moral one&mdash;to defend Albania against aggression he will
+find, I think, that the Yugoslavs heartily agree with
+this thesis and that they are also quite determined to
+defend Albania from aggression.... When he asserts
+that various ties existed between Italy and the Albanians&mdash;the
+Albanian language, the feudal architecture, much
+that is characteristic in Albanian art and so forth&mdash;I
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>would refer him to M. Justin Godart, with whom I am
+glad for once to be in agreement. "There is no traditional
+or actual link," says he, "between the two countries;
+if, on account of this geographical position, they propose
+to have commercial relations, then everything has yet
+to be established. If there is to be a friendship, we
+believe that Italy must do her best to wipe out many
+memories.... She has not profited from the large
+number of Albanians in her southern provinces in order
+to have an Albanian policy."</p>
+
+<p>However, the magnanimous Italians came back,
+declaring that on this occasion they would not occupy
+the country (except the little island of Saseno); but
+that they really could not restrain themselves from bestowing
+the schools, the rifles, munitions and gold. Once
+more the Albanians agreed to accept them; they also
+accepted the Turkish officers and officials whom the
+Italian ships brought to them from Asia Minor, and when
+their Government became more and more Turkish and
+more intractable they found that they had excited the
+hostility of large numbers of their own compatriots.
+This developed during 1921 into violent conflicts; and
+the bountiful Italians provided the Tirana Government's
+army with expert tuition. Nevertheless, in the Albanians'
+opinion, there are no bonds between the two
+races, and if the Italians would retire from Albania,
+permitting the Balkans to be for the Balkan peoples,
+and if the fanatical Turks went back to Asia Minor, it
+would soon be seen that the present rage between
+northern and central Albania would peter out into the
+isolated murders which the Albanians have hitherto been
+unable to dispense with. Left to themselves the Albanians
+of Tirana would eventually ask for some such assistance
+from Serbia as the northern tribes have received; three
+months after the departure of the Italians from Scutari
+a plebiscite would show that this town, which has lately
+gone so far as to refuse&mdash;yes, even her Moslems have
+refused&mdash;to fill the depleted ranks of the Tirana forces,
+was anxious to come to a friendly settlement with her
+Albanian neighbours and the Yugoslavs. This would be
+a victory of Scutari's common sense over all those fanatics
+and intriguers whose activities involve her death; for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
+she cannot possibly thrive if she persists in cutting herself
+off from the hinterland and from the benefits that will
+accrue from the canalization of the Bojana.</p>
+
+<p>However, the Italians&mdash;officially or unofficially&mdash;will
+not yet awhile leave Albania. And how will this retard
+or modify the reasonableness of those parts which acknowledge
+Tirana? As for the town of Scutari, it is probable
+that if she found herself permanently cut off by the
+Mirditi from direct communication with Tirana she
+would allow her incipient independence to come more to
+the surface. With Tirana less capable of enforcing her
+behests the Scutarenes would gradually venture to act
+in their own interests; they would aim at local autonomy
+within the sphere of Yugoslav influence and in the same
+sphere as their markets. It is to be hoped that Yugoslavia
+will be prepared for this, since she does not possess
+too many educated citizens who understand the Albanian
+mentality. A course of conduct which pays no attention
+to this would alienate even the Turks from Podgorica
+and Dulcigno, whose acquaintance with the very language
+of Albania is so limited. There seems, however, to be
+no reason why the mixed population of Albanian Moslems
+and Catholics, of Orthodox Serbs and of Moslems who
+declined to come under the all-too-patriarchal rule of
+Nicholas of Montenegro should not have the same happy
+experience as the inhabitants of Djakovica and Prizren.
+Later on the Scutarenes will be called upon to decide
+whether they prefer, like those other predominantly
+Albanian towns, to remain in Yugoslavia or whether they
+wish to throw in their lot with a free Albania, and in
+that case their town would become the capital of the
+country. Failing Scutari, the capital would most probably
+be Oroshi, which is now the capital of the Mirditi.</p>
+
+<p>And why, we may be asked, why should not Tirana be
+the capital? In the central parts of Albania, in the
+country round Tirana, where the natives are derisively
+called "llape" by the warriors of the north and by the
+cultured Albanians of the south, we believe that the
+assistance of Italy will be unable to prevent a collapse.
+(It must also be remembered that the people of the
+district of Tirana are, for the most part, in opposition
+to the present Tirana Government. This became clear<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
+when the partisans of Essad Pasha's policy<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> overthrew
+and imprisoned the Tirana Ministers.) Economically
+and morally Tirana will decline, until she is compelled to
+seek a union with the people of northern Albania, those
+of the south having meanwhile gravitated towards
+Greece. Then the moment will arrive when the north
+and the south, in their task of building up a free and
+united Albania, will admit the centre under various
+conditions. These will have to be of a rather stern
+character, or so at any rate they will seem to the folk
+of Tirana: taxes will have to be paid, military service or
+service in the <i>gendarmerie</i> will have to be rendered, and
+schools will have to be established for both sexes.</p>
+
+<p>This, then, is the future country of Albania, which&mdash;if
+one is rash enough to prophesy&mdash;may exist in fifty years.
+But there is no risk whatever in asserting that a free,
+united Albania is in the immediate future quite impossible.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">13. EUROPEAN MEASURES AGAINST THE YUGOSLAVS
+AND THEIR FRIENDS</p>
+
+<p>Berati Beg, Tirana's delegate in Paris, said in an
+interview with a representative of the Belgrade <i>Pravda</i>,
+at the beginning of November 1921, that he regretted
+that European diplomats should interfere in the Serbo-Albanian
+question. "Are we not all," said he, "one
+large Balkan family? And if the Powers intervene they
+will not act in our interests, but in their own." He said
+that it used to be Austria which grasped at Albania, now
+it was Italy. So the delegate showed that he was a clear-sighted
+man; he also showed that in Tirana they are
+not unanimous in loving the Italians. But alas! the
+Great Powers, urged by Italy, made a most disastrous
+plunge; they actually, at least Great Britain, charged
+the Serbs, their allies, on November 7, with being guilty
+of overstepping the frontier, and on November 9 informed
+them where this frontier was. It is a pity that Mr.
+Lloyd George should have launched such a thunderbolt,
+the French Government not being consulted.<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> But the
+most probable explanation of this lack of courtesy towards
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>the Serbs, and lack of the most elementary justice, is that
+the Prime Minister, with his numerous preoccupations,
+allowed some incapable person to act in his name.<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a> The
+world was told, however, that Mr. Lloyd George had sent
+a peremptory demand for the convocation of the Council
+of the League of Nations so that a sanction should be
+applied against the Yugoslavs. Mr. Lloyd George's
+substitute was so little versed in the business that he did
+not even know that the League of Nations is not a gendarme
+to carry out the decisions of the Ambassadors'
+Conference. He should have been aware of the fact that
+this was a problem for the Allied States, to be settled by
+diplomatic or other measures, and he should also have
+known that the League of Nations does not&mdash;except if
+invited to arbitrate&mdash;concern itself with the unliquidated
+problems left by the War, such as the Turkish question.
+Perhaps that dangerous confusion in the mind of this
+unknown official would not have occurred if Albania had
+not been illogically admitted to the League of Nations.
+But now, in November 1921, not an instant was to be
+lost in settling this frontier question, which&mdash;as the <i>Temps</i>
+pointed out&mdash;would have been settled months before if
+Italy had not prevented it. (She wished as a preliminary
+step to have certain claims of her own in regard to Albania
+conceded.) So the Council of the League was to be invited
+to apply Article 16, which could scarcely be invoked
+unless Article 15, which defines a procedure of conciliation,
+had been found of no avail.<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> Thus the misguided person
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>who spoke in the name of Mr. Lloyd George was apparently
+too impetuous to read the texts. And then the
+Serbs were told that they must withdraw practically to
+the frontier which Austria, their late enemy, had laid
+down in 1913. Well might Berati Beg deplore that Italy
+should take the place of Austria. But such commands
+achieve so little. Very soon, when the troubles in
+Albania continue, as they certainly will, Mr. Lloyd George
+will see that he was misled.... But here it should be
+stated that while Italy persisted throughout in demanding
+the 1913 frontier (with the ludicrously inconsistent
+proviso that she herself should have the island of Saseno,
+which in 1913 she had demanded for independent Albania),
+and France raised no finger against her, the actual improvements
+of the frontier adopted were entirely due to
+Great Britain. No one is more qualified to speak on this
+matter than Mr. Harold Temperley of Cambridge, who
+was one of our experts. In his illuminating little book,
+<i>The Second Year of the League</i>, he has pointed out that
+the new Albanian frontiers are an improvement on the
+old&mdash;than which, indeed, they cannot be worse&mdash;because
+they conform more to natural features, they
+take into account an important tribal boundary (leaving
+the Gora tribe in Yugoslavia), and restore to both
+parties freedom of communication&mdash;the road between the
+Serb towns of Struga and Dibra being given to the Serbs,
+while to Albania is given the road from Elbasan to the
+Serb town of Lin. The rectifications in the Kastrati
+and the Prizren area involve the substitution of natural
+boundaries for unnatural ones in order to protect the
+cities of Podgorica and Prizren. They confer no offensive
+advantage on the Serbs, nor do they enable them to menace
+any Albanian city.</p>
+
+<p>To any impartial observer it is quite unjust that
+the Yugoslavs should have had to plead against the
+frontier of 1913. They have not the least desire to plant
+their flag on those undelectable mountains. If the
+frontier of 1913 could be held with moderate efforts
+against these people they would not wish to go an inch
+beyond it. But those who drew this frontier, namely the
+Austrians, were not much concerned as to whether it
+afforded adequate protection to the Serbs; what they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
+had in view was to keep them away from the Adriatic
+(for which reason an arbitrary line cut through the proposed
+railway which was to link Pe&#263; to Podgorica and the
+sea) and to compel the Serbs to station in those districts
+a goodly portion of their army, to which end&mdash;so that
+the frontier should be weak&mdash;the towns of Djakovica
+and Prizren were separated from their hinterland. The
+Austrian plan likewise prevented the towns of Struga and
+Prizren from being joined by a road or by a railway along
+the Drin; to go from one to the other it became necessary
+to make an enormous detour. With the rectifications
+to which we have referred, the Ambassadors' Conference
+decided to insist on them returning to this miserable line,
+instead of permitting them to take up their position where
+General Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey perceived in 1918 that they
+could be fairly comfortable. Monsieur Albert Mousset,
+the shrewd Balkan expert of the <i>Journal des D&eacute;bats</i>, has
+remarked that on too many parts of the 1913 frontier it
+is as if one forced an honest man to sleep with his door
+open among a horde of bandits.... The Albanian
+Government, admitted to the League of Nations in
+December 1920, claimed that the international statute
+of 1913, creating a German prince, the Dutch <i>gendarmerie</i>
+and the International Financial Commission&mdash;which
+happened to be inconvenient&mdash;was no longer in force;
+but that the international decisions as to the frontiers of
+Albania&mdash;which happened to be convenient&mdash;were still
+valid. However, during the War the country had been
+plunged in anarchy, and the Great Powers decided that
+Albania was, in Mr. Temperley's words, a <i>tabula rasa</i>, a
+piece of white paper on which they could write what they
+wished. In November 1921 the Ambassadors' Conference
+finally decided on the frontiers. The gravest
+violation of the ethnic principle was in the Argyrocastro
+area, where many thousands of Greeks and Grecophils
+were handed over to Albania; as for the Serbs, it was
+only through the efforts of some British experts that
+they obtained any satisfaction at all.</p>
+
+<p>Why did the Ambassadors' Conference arrive at this
+peculiar decision? For a long time the European Press
+had been publishing telegrams which told how the Serbs
+were ruthlessly invading Albania. Had they advanced<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
+about half the number of miles with which they were
+credited, they would have found themselves near to the
+offices of those Italian Press agencies. They were held
+up to vituperation for their conduct towards a feeble
+neighbour. The Mirditi, we were told, had to fly before
+them; whereas the truth was that the friendly Mirditi
+were driving the troops of Tirana helter-skelter towards
+the Black Drin, where the Serbs&mdash;not advancing an inch
+from the boundary which the Allies had for the time being
+assigned to them&mdash;received their prisoners. Again we
+were told that the piratical Serbs had seized the town of
+Alessio. It must have annoyed the Mirditi to have this
+exploit of theirs ascribed to other people. And if the
+newspapers contained too many telegrams of this kind
+they were strangely reticent with regard to what was
+taking place in the shallow Albanian harbours; but the
+two Italian vessels which&mdash;as I mentioned in a telegram
+to the <i>Observer</i>&mdash;were unloading, without the least concealment,
+munitions and rifles for the dear Albanians at
+San Giovanni di Medua in September 1920, were probably
+not the only ones with such a cargo. Europe and the
+Ambassadors' Conference were simply told that the
+truculent Serbs were destroying a poor, defenceless,
+pastoral nation. Therefore these Serbs must be ordered
+back, and whatever might be the merits of a hostile
+Austrian frontier as compared with a well-informed
+French one, at any rate the first of these was farther back,
+so let the Serbs be ordered thither.</p>
+
+<p>It was noticeable that when, on November 17, the
+British Minister of Education, Mr. H.&nbsp;A.&nbsp;L. Fisher (representing
+Mr. Lloyd George), explained before the Council
+of the League of Nations why Great Britain had thought
+it necessary to act in this Serbo-Albanian affair, he
+founded his case not on Article 16 but on Article 12,
+which obliges two conflicting nations who are members
+of the League to have their case examined by the League.
+Evidently the suggested application of Article 16 was
+now acknowledged to have been a mistake. The blundering
+official in Whitehall should have seen the dignified
+sorrow with which Yugoslavia heard of her great Ally's
+unjustifiable procedure. So much faith have the Southern
+Slavs always had in the Entente's sense of justice that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
+from 1914 to 1918 they continued to give their all, without
+making any agreement or stipulation; more than once
+the Serbian Government had the offer of terms from the
+Central Powers, but on each occasion, as for example
+during the dark days at Ni&#353; in 1915, they declined to
+betray their Allies.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fisher announced that the British Government's
+action was in no way caused by feelings of hostility
+against the Southern Slavs. All Englishmen, in fact,
+remembered the heroism and fortitude of the Serbs;
+they cherished for Yugoslavia the warmest sympathy.
+In Mr. Fisher's own case it might conceivably have been
+a little warmer&mdash;he was not ashamed to repeat the reasons
+which had induced Great Britain to summon the Council
+of the League. Yet he must have known the comment
+that he would arouse among his audience when they
+heard him base his arguments exclusively upon reports
+of the Tirana Government, while those of Belgrade were
+ignored; and in their place the delegate thought fit to
+bring up various extracts which had been collected from
+the Belgrade Press. If every organ of this Press were
+filled with a permanent sense of high responsibility, and
+if Mr. Fisher had made inquiries as to the existence in
+Belgrade of humorous and ironic writers, one is still
+rather at a loss to understand why these miscellaneous
+cuttings were placed before the League, which could
+scarcely be expected to treat them as evidence. The
+delegate added that he did not think a single nation was
+animated by unfriendly sentiments towards the Southern
+Slavs&mdash;so that Italy's unflagging efforts to strengthen
+the Tirana Government's army were prompted purely
+by the deep love which the Italians&mdash;despite their having
+been flung out of Valona&mdash;bear for the Shqyptart. Mr.
+Fisher proceeded to say that no better proof was needed
+of the general friendship for the Southern Slavs than
+the decision of the Ambassadors' Conference which,
+instead of allotting to Albania the frontiers of 1913, a
+method that would have been simpler, had resolved on
+several rectifications in favour of Yugoslavia, in order
+to prevent disturbances on Albania's northern frontier.
+After what Mr. Fisher had already had the heart to say
+we cannot really be astonished that he, or the people<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
+on behalf of whom he spoke, should have thought the
+enemy-drawn frontier of 1913 as worthy of the slightest
+consideration. We are all, I think, unanimous, said Mr.
+Fisher in effect, we are unanimous in our esteem for the
+Yugoslavs and could do nothing which that nation would
+find hard to bear. But after stating that some rectifications
+had been made in favour of Yugoslavia he should
+have referred to the village of Lin on Lake Ochrida
+whose transference to the Albanians will probably give
+rise to a great deal of trouble, since it is the most important
+centre for the fishing industry. A few of the best Belgrade
+papers, careless of the more than Governmental authority
+which they enjoyed in the eyes of Mr. Fisher, went so
+far as to allege that Lin's change of sovereignty was due
+to the formation on Lake Ochrida of a British fishing
+company.... We have said that the frontier rectifications
+were inadequate; but under the circumstances
+they were the best that could be obtained. They were
+most bitterly contested by the Italians, who demanded,
+as we have said above, that Yugoslavia should be given the
+1913 frontier. France did nothing to help the Yugoslavs
+in this hour of need, and had it not been for the absolutely
+determined support of Great Britain the pernicious frontier
+of 1913 would have been adopted intact.</p>
+
+<p>Coming to the Mirdite revolt, Mr. Fisher's description
+is hardly what you would call felicitous. Mark Djoni
+and the other members of the Mirdite Government were
+compelled last July to seek refuge at Prizren in Yugoslavia,
+and since then they have conducted their affairs
+from that place. These circumstances, in Mr. Fisher's
+opinion, go to prove the existence of a Yugoslav plot
+whose aim it is to separate northern Albania from the
+Tirana Government. Again Mr. Fisher points an accusing
+finger at the Yugoslav officers who, in August, were
+helping the Mirditi; but is it not more natural that
+these officers should give their services to the Christian
+tribes for whom, as Mr. Bo&#353;kovi&#263;, the chief Yugoslav
+delegate, said, the Southern Slavs do not conceal their
+sympathy<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> nor the hope that they will gain the necessary
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>autonomy&mdash;is not this more natural and more deserving
+of Mr. Fisher's approbation than the fact (of which he
+says no word) that the Moslem Government of Tirana
+has had the active assistance of Italian officers, such, for
+example, as Captain Guisardi, who, in the sector of
+Kljesh, has been in command of the artillery? A further
+proof that the Mirdite movement has been engineered
+by the Southern Slavs is, in Mr. Fisher's opinion, the
+damning fact that the Republic's Proclamation was
+composed in Yugoslavia and dated there&mdash;how brazen
+some people are! And the official Yugoslav Press
+Bureau has actually circulated the announcements of the
+Mirdite Republic. The question is whether the Yugoslav
+Government was more than benevolently neutral in thus
+assisting their guests at a time when these had not yet
+got their machinery into working order. When the
+Mirdite Government had made suitable arrangements it
+spoke to the world through its representatives at Geneva
+or through direct communications to the British and
+French Press. Surely, in considering whether the Yugoslav
+Government allowed themselves to exceed the
+limits of neutrality, one must remember that the Mirdite
+authorities at Prizren were out of all touch with their
+own army, which was engaged in a guerilla warfare. In
+conclusion, according to Mr. Fisher, the British Foreign
+Office was persuaded that the Mirdite Republic was
+nothing but an instrument of the <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Yuglosav'">Yugoslav</ins> Government,
+and that desire for Albanian unity extended also to the
+Christians of that country. The Foreign Office had, no
+doubt, been told that the Tirana Government received
+the support, at last spring's elections, of some north
+Albanian deputies; and possibly they gave no credence
+to the rumour that these gentlemen were much indebted
+to Italian support. It may have been mere harmless
+curiosity which kept Captain Pericone, the Italian commander,
+during all that day at the Scutari polling-booths,
+but what is certain is that, owing to the influx of Italian
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>money, the value of a hundred silver crowns in the
+morning was 92 lire, and in the afternoon had fallen to
+75. It is likewise a fact that numerous Malissori, finding
+themselves for the first time in possession of bundles of
+paper and feeling far from confident that this was money,
+hurried off to the bazaar and spent it all. Thus were
+the four friends of the Moslem-Italian<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> Government
+elected, the four deputies who were in favour of Albanian
+unity under that Government; three of them are
+Christians (Messrs. Fichta, Andreas Miedia and Luigi
+Gurakuqi); one, Riza Dani, is a Moslem. How the
+latter travelled to Tirana I do not know, but the three
+Christians found that the population was so incensed
+against them that they could not go by the direct road;
+they were forced to sail down the Bojana on the Italian
+ship <i>Mafalda</i>, and then along the coast. This, I presume,
+will be considered sufficiently strong evidence that these
+deputies did not represent the people, and that their
+independence was not exactly of the sort ascribed to
+Gurakuqi by a writer in the <i>Times</i>;<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> one need not labour
+the point by mentioning what happened to Father Vincent
+Pr&ecirc;nnushi whose candidature was vetoed in Rome, so
+that he was replaced by Father Fichta.</p>
+
+<p>This being the state of things one can scarcely argue
+that the people of the north are in favour of a united
+Albania, as it seemeth good to the Ambassadors' Conference,
+the League of Nations, etc. "We Germans,
+knowing Germany and France," said Treitschke in 1871,
+"know what is good for the Alsatians better than these
+unfortunates themselves.... Against their will we
+wish to restore them to themselves." The north
+Albanian deputies may join with those of the south
+and call themselves the group of "sacred union"; but
+they themselves are well aware that it is only in the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>south-central districts that the Government has a
+majority. That is one of the reasons why the seat of
+Government is Tirana in the central part of the country,
+for the Cabinet lives in apprehension of the followers of
+the late Essad Pasha, and by residing in that country
+they hope to be able to keep it quiet. How long will
+they be able to do so? Have they statesmanship enough
+to turn aside the animosity of their own countrymen?
+Does their Premier and Foreign Minister, Mr. Pandeli
+Evangheli, possess intellectual resources of a higher
+order than those which one commonly associates with
+the ownership of a small wine-shop?&mdash;that was his
+occupation till he came, some two years ago, from
+Bucharest. When this gentleman had a, perhaps temporary,
+fall from power, the <i>Times</i> of December 16, 1921,
+wrote of him that "there is no Albanian public man
+with a better record for long disinterested service in his
+country's cause." Alas, poor Albania! We may surmise
+that Mr. Evangheli and his companions do not
+rely very greatly on their Western European patrons
+who, when it comes to the pinch, will do very little for
+them. I should be surprised to hear that they have
+caused the provisions of the Ambassadors' Conference
+to be traced in golden letters on a wall of their council
+chamber. And I doubt whether they take very great
+stock of a resolution signed in November 1921, by some
+twenty Members of Parliament and a few outside persons.
+These expressed their approval of Mr. Lloyd George's step
+in convoking the League of Nations for the settlement
+of the Serbo-Albanian question. If this resolution served
+no other purpose it showed, at any rate, that the signatories
+are such thoroughgoing friends of the Tirana
+Government that they rushed enthusiastically to their
+assistance, though their deep knowledge of affairs&mdash;without
+which, of course, they would never have signed&mdash;must
+have caused them to regard the Prime Minister's
+impulsive action with something more than misgiving.
+It is a minor point that the signatories sought to enlist
+the world's sympathy on the ground that a small "neutral
+State" had been wantonly attacked by the Serbs, because
+if this accusation were true it would not be worth objecting
+that the Albanians were scarcely a State (though some<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
+of them were trying to make one) and that their neutrality
+during the War consisted in the fact that they were to be
+found both in the armies of the Entente and&mdash;rather more
+of them, I believe&mdash;in those of Austria. But the accusation
+is untrue; there are, undoubtedly, a number of
+fire-eaters in Serbia, as everywhere else, yet the Government
+is not so childish as to wish to squander its resources
+in a region where there is so little to be gained. (The
+Tirana correspondent of <i>The Near East</i> said on November 3,
+1921, that the Serbian Government was reported to be
+committing unwarrantable acts, giving as an example
+that Commandant Martinovi&#263; had had six million dinars
+placed at his disposal in order to recruit komitadjis and
+that he had himself promised 2500 dinars to each of
+his men if they succeeded in entering Scutari. But
+this gentleman, a retired officer, lives almost exclusively
+at Novi Sad, where his very beautiful daughter is married
+to M. Dunjarski, one of the wealthiest men in Yugoslavia.
+Yet neither his son-in-law nor the Serbian Government has
+ever given General Martinovi&#263; the afore-mentioned sum
+or any sum at all for the afore-mentioned purpose. He
+goes at rare intervals to his old home in Montenegro, of
+which country he was once Prime Minister. It is natural
+that the numerous refugees from Albania should flock
+round him&mdash;in view of his own past prominence and of
+M. Dunjarski&mdash;begging for money and food.) The
+protesting British Members of Parliament registered their
+sorrow that the Serbs should have employed on their
+anti-Albanian enterprise "the strength and riches which
+they largely owed to the Allied and Associated Powers."
+I was under the impression that the Serbs had expended
+a far greater proportion of their strength and riches
+than any of the Allies,<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> that the Allies had, in 1915, left
+them in the lurch, and that the final success on the Macedonian
+front was due quite considerably to the genius of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>Marshal Mi&#353;i&#263; and the valour of his veterans. As for
+the strength and riches which the Southern Slavs possessed
+in 1921, it surely would not need an expert to
+perceive what the Southern Slav children knew very well,
+namely, that they could be more profitably employed in
+many other directions. May better luck attend the
+future labours of these Members of Parliament.... A
+week or so before the publication of this foolish manifesto
+there had been issued an equally deplorable Memorandum
+by the Balkan Committee (of London), which,
+I am glad to say, caused Dr. Seton-Watson to resign from
+that body. This jejune and impudent Memorandum
+attempted to dictate the terms of the Constitution of the
+Triune Kingdom&mdash;an attempt very rightly reprobated
+by <i>The Near East</i>.<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> If the Yugoslav Government were
+to adopt the recommendations of the Balkan Committee
+they would, it seems, be in a fair way to solve the Albanian
+question. Likewise that of Macedonia&mdash;when will the
+Committee cease to trouble Macedonia? Their object,
+in the words of Mr. Noel Buxton, is to aim at allaying the
+unrest in the Balkans; it would&mdash;I say it in all kindliness&mdash;be
+a move in that direction if the other members
+were to follow Dr. Seton-Watson's example.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">14. THE REGION FROM WHICH THE YUGOSLAVS
+HAVE RETIRED</p>
+
+<p>What of the population which inhabits the zone
+between the two frontier lines? We have alluded to
+them as a horde of bandits, we have also spoken of the
+six battalions which they placed at the disposal of the
+Yugoslavs. If it is true that a poet has died in the
+bosom of most of us, it is equally true that in most of
+the Albanians a brigand survives. And if not a brigand,
+then a medi&aelig;val person with characteristics which are
+more pleasant to read about than to encounter. Yet the
+Shqyptar, as he calls himself (which means the eagle's
+son) is not without his aspirations. Reference has been
+made to those northern tribes, such as the Merturi and
+the Gashi, who benefited from the small Serbian detachments
+which came in answer to their urgent wish. And
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>on the Black Drin the six battalions have shown their
+fidelity. There would be no need to guard oneself against
+such people. But unfortunately the Albanian is so constituted
+that if, in a hamlet of ten houses, five of them
+are amicably disposed towards you, there is a strong
+tendency among the others to be hostile. When these
+torch-bearers of an ancient tradition come under the rule
+of an organized State, then they gradually feel inclined
+to discard some of their customs which the State frowns
+upon. This can be seen in the changes among the people
+of Kossovo since it came into Serbian hands. Were
+the country between the two frontier lines to remain
+under the Serbs it would not be long before some of the
+time-honoured sensitiveness of the Albanians towards
+each other and towards each others' friends would vanish&mdash;though
+it has been found that it takes a number of
+years before they cease observing or from desiring to
+observe the very deeply-rooted custom of blood-vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>A good many of the border Albanians have made it
+clear that they wish for some sort of association with
+their more cultured neighbours. But on this point they
+are by no means unanimous. The unregenerate part of
+the people will not be able to resist an occasional foray
+into Yugoslavia. And although the reputation which
+the Serbs have left behind them may induce the tribes
+to be, for the most part, good neighbours, yet they have
+not been long enough under the civilizing process, and
+the more advanced among them would agree with the
+Yugoslavs that it would have been better for that r&eacute;gime
+to have continued over them. You may object that
+the finest patriots of the Albanians would have preferred
+to remain outside Yugoslavia. But they know that there
+are many thousands of their contented countryfolk in
+the neighbouring Kossovo and, what is more, they know
+that the towns of Kossovo are their markets.</p>
+
+<p>The Yugoslavs have bowed to the decision of their
+Allies. And the official champions of the too-ambitious
+League of Nations&mdash;overjoyed, after various failures
+and after the Silesian award, to have really accomplished
+something, and something with whose merits the public
+was far less familiar than with the Silesian fiasco&mdash;performed
+a war-dance on the Yugoslavs. If that people<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
+had been as obstinate, say, as the Magyars in the case
+of Burgenland, no doubt it would have come to another
+Conference of Venice; and Yugoslavia would, like
+Hungary, have returned from there with something
+gained. But, of course, when it is an affair between
+Allies one scarcely likes to behave in that stubborn and
+unyielding manner which is apparently the right&mdash;at all
+events, the successful&mdash;conduct for a whilom foe. If
+the Yugoslavs, in simply accepting the judgment of their
+Allies, acted against their own ultimate advantage, they
+can, at any rate, believe that their complaisance, their
+extraordinary lack of chauvinism, will be recognized.
+It is true that when, on former occasions, such as during
+the prolonged d'Annunzio farce at Rieka, they displayed
+a similar and wonderful forbearance, they did not manage
+to free themselves from this foolish charge. There
+happen to be a good many people abroad who insist
+that the new States are, every one of them, chauvinist;
+they think it is the natural thing for a young country to
+be, and especially if part of it lies in the Balkans. But
+if Yugoslavia repeatedly acts in the most correct fashion
+the day may come when she will be able to put a lasting
+polish on to the reputation which her Allies have tarnished.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">15. THE PROSPECT</p>
+
+<p>We may look forward to seeing the majority of this
+frontier population resolved that the links between themselves
+and the Yugoslavs shall not be broken. Very little
+will they care for the edicts of European Ambassadors.
+It would not have been surprising to hear that on the withdrawal
+of the Yugoslavs to the prescribed frontier their
+resourceful friends beyond it had procured from Serbia
+a few volunteers to take the place of the official Serbs.
+And failing this, that rough-and-ready people might
+simply declare themselves to be in Yugoslavia. This time
+they will be unable to persuade the Yugoslav Government
+to move its excise posts more to the west. But if these
+tenacious men have made up their minds to join their
+brethren on the right bank of the Drin and enter Yugoslavia,
+the Ambassadors' Conference would preserve more
+of their dignity in accepting with a good grace that which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
+they are powerless to hinder.... The minority of the
+border population will go raiding in Yugoslavia. If
+they had been consulted they would have drawn the
+frontier very much as it is. With large areas lying at
+their mercy they will keep the border villages in constant
+dread. And that is the other reason which should induce
+the Ambassadors' Conference to cancel their unwise
+decision.</p>
+
+<p>It is better when the politicians do not come with
+advice to the battlefield; and in those primitive regions,
+where part of the people cannot, as yet, be restrained
+from perpetual warfare, it would have been better if the
+politicians had done nothing but confirm the General's
+frontier. Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey gave it to the Serbs "for
+the time being," and that period should last until there
+is no longer any military need to hold it. "No General,
+however distinguished, could possibly have any authority
+whatever to give to any nation the territories of another,
+such as can only be transferred and delineated by treaties
+and international recognition." So says Mr. H.&nbsp;E. Goad,
+or Captain Goad as he has the right to call himself. But
+it is a pity that he does not appreciate the difference
+between that which is temporary and that which is not.</p>
+
+<p>Italy has been given against the Yugoslavs a purely
+strategic frontier, which places under her dominion over
+500,000 unwilling Slovenes, whose culture is admittedly
+on a higher level than that of their Italian neighbours.
+And yet the Ambassadors' Conference (in which Italy
+plays a prominent part) has refused to give Yugoslavia
+a strategic frontier against a much more turbulent neighbour,
+which frontier, moreover, would include of alien
+subjects only a small fraction of the number which Italy
+has obtained. The Albanian frontier now imposed on
+Yugoslavia is very much like that which the treaties of
+1815 gave to France, when the passage (<i>trou&eacute;e</i>) of Couvin,
+often called erroneously the trou&eacute;e of the Oise, at a
+short distance from Paris, was purposely opened.
+"Formerly," says Professor Jean Brunhes,<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> "the sources
+of the Oise belonged to France, protected, far back, by
+the two enclaves of Philippeville and Marienbourg, both
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>fortified by Vauban." And M. Gabriel Hanotaux<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a>
+remarks that this opening of the trou&eacute;e of Couvin was
+the reason why in 1914 France lost the battle of
+Charleroi.</p>
+
+<p>The Ambassadors' Conference has committed a grave
+injustice. "Let us hope," says M. Justin Godart,<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a> a
+French ex-Under Secretary of Hygiene, concerning whose
+very misguided mission to Albania we have written
+elsewhere,<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a> "let us hope," says he&mdash;in my opinion one
+of the unjustest men towards Yugoslavia and Greece&mdash;"let
+us hope that Yugoslavia will understand that it is
+unworthy of her to contest the decision of the Ambassadors'
+Conference." It has given to the Yugoslavs a frontier
+that necessitates the presence of a considerable army,
+and this is precisely what suits the Italians. Seeing
+that in Italy there are men alive who can recall their
+struggles against the Austrian oppressor, it is sad that
+their own country should now be playing this very same
+r&ocirc;le. The Ambassadors appear to have taken no notice
+of Italy's support of the Tirana Government, but to
+have been very drastic with respect to Yugoslavia's
+support of the Mirditi. They have punished the Yugoslavs
+by binding their hands in a district part of whose
+population long for the help of those hands in gaining
+some tranquillity, whereas the other part consists of
+persons against whom one must defend oneself.</p>
+
+<p>The politicians have acted as if all the border folk
+were as peaceful as they doubtless are themselves. In
+consequence, there will be panic and assassination till
+the politicians&mdash;unable to oppose the wishes of the
+majority of those who dwell in the frontier zone&mdash;proclaim
+that until further notice General Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey's
+wise and prudent dispositions shall be honoured.</p>
+
+
+<p style="padding-top: 1.5em">That is the only method by which an Albania can
+be brought slowly into existence. At this moment the
+cartographers are printing the map of the Albanians'
+country in accordance with the Ambassadors' decision.
+They might spare themselves the trouble. The decision
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>to recognize an Albania was as premature a project as, in
+Mr. Wells' opinion, is the League of Nations. A free,
+united Albania has been recognized, and in a little time
+the Ambassadors' Conference, perceiving that such a
+thing does not exist, will be relieved to see the North and
+the South taking the steps to which we have referred.
+It is wonderful that the Ambassadors' Conference and the
+League of Nations should imagine that a country, most
+of which is in the social state of the Gallic clans in the
+days of Vercingetorix, can suddenly become a modern
+nation by the simple contrivance of a parliament, which,
+as a matter of fact, has been the caricature of one. In
+the words of Lord Halsbury, when reversing a judgment
+of the Court of Appeal, I am bewildered by the absurdity
+of such a suggestion. Albania is in need of organizers,
+not of orators. A very competent French traveller,<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a>
+one who believes that a future is reserved for this unquenchable
+people, warns the world against undue haste.
+After describing the deplorable state or the non-existence
+of Albanian schools, roads, ports, the monetary system
+and the organization of credit, he says that it is scarcely
+an exaggeration to assert that from the point of view of
+economic arrangement everything has to be created.
+This necessitates a Government which knows how to
+administer and which has funds at its command. But
+there is not the least likelihood of regular taxes being
+paid to a central Government until you have security
+of communication. And even then the native&mdash;except
+if force is used&mdash;will not pay before he sees the benefit
+which taxes produce. He who for the most part has
+never given obedience save to his village chief will require
+to see the local benefit. Therefore his whole outlook
+must be changed; slowly from being parochial it must
+become national.... There can be no greater folly than
+at this stage to aim at applying modern usages, equality
+of taxation, uniformity of judicial organization, and so
+forth. It must be a very slow advance, says M. Jaray,
+taking local traditions and the feudalism, both domestic
+and collective, into account. Even if a central Government
+had all the necessary qualifications, yet that would
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>not cause the people to regard it with gratitude and
+loyalty. It is too remote. The clans have been accustomed
+to look no farther than their own chiefs. Only
+in serious circumstances and against an invasion have
+they united and chosen a common leader. To expect
+the Albanians rapidly to throw aside their clannishness
+is to prepare for oneself a disappointment. It is in the
+clan that they must be made fit for something more
+extensive. Let the country be recognized not as a nation,
+but as a collection of clans, and let these clans, with any
+outside assistance they themselves may choose, come
+gradually to understand the word "Albania." ... And
+what are the chances that this will come to pass? No
+country is more feudal; yet only the most thoroughgoing
+peasant reforms will lay a sure foundation for the State.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">(<i>b</i>) <span class="smcap">The Greek Frontier</span></p>
+
+<p>The frontier with Greece has undergone no alteration
+as a result of the War. It is inconvenient in certain
+details; it runs, for example, at such a very short distance
+to the south of the town of Ghevgeli that the prefect has
+little chance of frustrating those who actively object to
+the payment of import duties. Rather a large number
+of Slavs, some say 300,000, live on the Greek side of the
+frontier, while a far smaller number of Greeks live in
+Monastir. Both the Slavs and the Greeks have made
+sundry complaints, which are more or less justified,
+against the alien authority which governs them. However,
+during 1919 and 1920, the two Governments resolved,
+in the furtherance of their good understanding,
+to raise none of these questions, neither the claims of the
+derelict Slavs, who are mostly Exarchists, nor of the
+Monastir Greeks, who are mostly hellenized Vlachs.
+The two countries, while Venizelos was in power, were
+acting on the principles of the Serbo-Greek friendship
+that used to be advocated by <i>L'Hell&eacute;nisme</i>, the newspaper
+which Sir Anastasius Adossides, under Venizelos the
+enlightened Governor-General of Salonica, published for
+several years before the first Balkan War in Paris. Yugoslavia
+was to have every facility given her in Salonica,
+which course would naturally be the most beneficial to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
+that place. And among the minor advantages of really
+amicable relations would be the impossibility of such a
+state of things as once prevailed at Doiran, where the
+masters of the Greek and Bulgarian schools were neither
+of them in a position to chastise their peccant pupils,
+who could always have the last word by threatening to
+transfer themselves to the rival establishment. It was,
+I believe, the custom of these young scoundrels to
+remain at one or other of the two schools on the understanding
+that the teacher gave them a retaining fee
+of so many chocolates.... One rather felt, during
+1919 and 1920, that the Yugoslavs, in their willingness
+to take the hand of Greece, which had so shamefully
+refused to act upon its obligations in the first half of the
+War, were behaving as if Venizelos would henceforward
+be retained in power by his countrymen. Should the
+Serbs find themselves hampered in their use of the "Free
+Zone" at Salonica, a moment might arrive when they and
+the Bulgars would, to their mutual advantage, make an
+arrangement with regard to Salonica and her hinterland.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">(<i>c</i>) <span class="smcap">The Bulgarian Frontier</span></p>
+
+<p>There have been various modifications in the frontier
+line between Serbia and Bulgaria. The Bulgars acknowledge
+that in the case of the Struma salient, of the part
+near Vranja and of the villages on the bank of the Timok,
+it was clearly for the purpose of safeguarding the railways;
+and few people would be found to say that Serbia
+has been other than modest in her demands. Compare
+the Italian position on the Brenner with the Yugoslav
+frontier against Bulgaria and in the Baranja: against
+Bulgars and Magyars the Yugoslavs only secure a sound
+defensive frontier, whereas Italy obtains a capacity for
+the offensive against Austria.<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> It is rather different
+with regard to Tsaribrod, on the main line between Ni&#353;
+and Sofia. So good a friend of the Yugoslavs as Dr.
+Seton-Watson has deplored the cession of this small
+place, since it appears likely to imperil a future friendship
+between Serbia and Bulgaria. As a matter of fact the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>Yugoslav Peace Delegates requested, for strategic purposes,
+a still more southerly frontier on the Dragoman
+Pass, which was denied to them. But Tsaribrod, which
+is dominated by the heights of Dragoman, is anyhow a
+place of minor importance. It is much to be hoped that
+the inhabitants will not imitate those of the Pirot <i>intelligentsia</i>
+who in 1878 shook off the dust of their town
+when it became Serbian and migrated to Sofia, where
+they never wearied of anti-Serbian agitation. One
+must do one's best not to retard the arrival of that day
+when it will be almost a matter of indifference as to
+whether a village is situated in Serbia or in Bulgaria.
+Mr. Stanojevi&#263;, the deputy for Zaje&#269;a, which is not far
+from the frontier, proposed in the Skup&#353;tina that Tsaribrod
+should be left to the Bulgars in exchange for a sum
+of money. This suggestion was opposed by the Radicals,
+and the far-seeing Yugoslav statesmen who would gladly
+have adopted it were left hoping that the Skup&#353;tina
+would some day decide in its favour.... This moderation
+on the part of the Serbs has been less in evidence at
+Bucharest and still less at Athens. The Peace Conference
+which felt itself unable to deprive its Ally of
+southern Dobrudja, and unable to resist the persuasive
+eloquence of M. Venizelos, does not seem to have contributed
+towards a lasting Balkan peace. A reviewer in
+the <i>Observer</i>, while approving of Mr. Leland Buxton's hope
+of a Serb-Bulgar reconciliation, asks why this should be
+effected to the exclusion and obvious detriment of Greece.
+"Why not a Balkan Federation?" he asks. In view of
+the very different races which inhabit the Balkans, he
+might just as well ask, "Why not a European Federation?"
+And the statesmen of the non-Slav Balkan
+countries do not seem to have made serious efforts to
+prevent the coming of a purely Slav Federation. It
+remains to be seen whether, when that comes to pass,
+the Greek and Roumanian people will have achieved such
+statesmanship as to make an equally small effort to keep
+under their control their large Slav territories.... "We
+should no longer think of Thrace," said M. Venizelos in
+the Greek Chamber in 1913, "for it is impossible to
+include in the Greek State all those parts where Greeks
+have lived; we ought to be modest and contented with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
+what is most righteous and attainable; we ought not to
+let ourselves be carried away by our imagination."</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">(<i>d</i>) <span class="smcap">The Roumanian Frontier</span></p>
+
+<p class="section">THE STATE OF THE ROUMANIANS IN EASTERN SERBIA</p>
+
+<p>A new frontier between Yugoslavia and Roumania
+has been drawn by the Allied Powers in the Banat.
+But before we consider its merits and absurdities we must
+examine the Serbo-Roumanian question in the several
+departments of eastern Serbia. During 1919 one heard
+a good deal, in Bucharest and in Paris, of the pitiful
+Roumanians whom the Serbs had always deprived of
+their own national schools and churches. It was claimed,
+chiefly by a certain Dr. Athanasius Popovitch, that the
+Roumanians in Serbia were longing for the day of their
+redemption. On March 8, 1919, two deputations of
+Roumanians from the Timok and from Macedonia, who
+had lately arrived in Paris in order to plead before the
+Conference, presented themselves to the Roumanian
+colony at 114 Avenue des Champs-Elysees. We are told
+that in consequence of their moving narrative, and on
+account of the loud appeal made by them to all their
+free brothers, the Roumanian colony founded, with
+great enthusiasm, a national league for their delivery.
+The Vice-President of the league was announced to be
+Dr. Athanasius Popovici. In a pamphlet called <i>Les
+Roumains de Serbie</i> (Paris, 1919), Dr. Draghicesco, a
+Roumanian Senator, denounces the Serb authorities for
+having obliged Dr. Athanasius, while he was a schoolboy,
+to change his surname into the purely Serbian one of
+Popovitch. "Not being able to endure this r&eacute;gime of
+violence," we are informed, "he expatriated himself and
+established himself in Roumania." But if Dr. Athanasius
+felt so strongly with regard to his name when
+he was a mere schoolboy, one is puzzled to understand
+why, being an adult and a pamphleteer in 1919, he should
+be hesitating between Popovitch, which is Serbian, and
+Popovici, which is Roumanian. The Senator does not
+seem to be well informed as to the early years of Dr.
+Athanasius, who so far from expatriating himself as an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
+indignant schoolboy, remained in Serbia, where he went
+through five classes of the gymnasium in Belgrade, after
+which he studied theology in the same town, with a view
+to succeeding his father, who was a priest at Du&#353;anovac
+in eastern Serbia. Later on Athanasius performed his
+military service at Zaje&#269;a, where he married&mdash;so one of
+his sisters told me&mdash;one Mileva, the daughter of Yovan
+Stan&#269;evi&#263;, a merchant. After his marriage he went to
+Jena, in order to continue his studies, and there he became
+a Doctor of Letters. It may be that while he was at
+Jena he became conscious of the r&eacute;gime of violence to
+which the Roumanians in Serbia are subjected; at any
+rate he decided not to return to that country, where his
+wife and three sisters are well satisfied to live. He
+launched himself into a furious anti-Serbian propaganda in
+favour of those who, in the words of Dr. Draghicesco,
+are profoundly sad and full of grief at being neither
+Serbian nor Roumanian, who when they meet a
+Roumanian brother listen to him with pleasure and,
+with their eyes full of tears, murmur: "How happy
+we should be to be with you." ... When I travelled
+through those parts with a view to verifying Dr.
+Athanasius's assertions, I was invariably told by persons
+of Roumanian origin that they had no complaint whatever
+against the Serbs, and that the last thing they desired
+was to be politically united to the Roumanians of the
+kingdom. Dr. Athanasius might reply that his wretched
+compatriots were impelled by fear to give such answers.
+But what do they fear?&mdash;one finds that among these
+people are deputies, priests, army officers and so forth.
+"To-day," says Dr. Athanasius, "all the peoples who
+are reduced to slavery by other people secure the right
+to return to their fatherland." The Roumanians of
+Serbia would have to be a good deal more miserable before
+wishing to have anything to do with Roumania. Milan
+Soldatovi&#263;, ex-mayor of the great mining village of Bor
+and himself of Roumanian origin, said that he had never
+heard of any one who went to work in Roumania. No
+doubt the present generation of Roumanian landowners
+deeply deplore the misdeeds of their ancestors, who drove
+the ancestors of these peasants away from Roumania.
+"The peasant hovels were merely dark burrows, called<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
+<i>bordei</i>, holes dug in the ground and roofed with poles
+covered with earth, rising scarcely above the level of the
+plain.... The interior was indescribable. Neither furniture
+nor utensils, with the exception of the boards
+which served as beds or seats and the pot for cooking
+the <i>mamaliga</i>"<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a>&mdash;his sole food, a paste consisting of
+maize meal cooked in water. And one cannot be
+astonished if the Roumanians in Serbia are chary of
+believing that their native land has changed for the
+better. "If," said a Roumanian peasant before an Agricultural
+Commission in 1848, "if the boyar could have
+laid hands upon the sun, he would have seized it and
+sold God's light and warmth to the peasant for money."
+Even in 1919 the peasant still had much reason to be
+dissatisfied, for where the owner parted with his land it
+was usually&mdash;no doubt as a stage in the transaction&mdash;made
+over to the village as a whole. And if the boyar
+no longer has the monopoly of the sale of alcohol, if he
+has so far improved that Vallachia is not now losing its
+inhabitants as it was after the Regulations of 1831, when
+we read that "in vain the rivers are assiduously watched,
+as if in a state of siege; the emigrants cross at the places
+which are clear of troops. Emigration is especially rife
+in winter, when the frozen Danube presents an ever-open
+bridge," yet among the Roumanians of Serbia it
+has been handed down from father to son what happened
+in the reign of Prince Milo&#353;. To take one case out of
+many such that are preserved in the National Archives
+at Belgrade, a dispatch was sent on February 11, 1831,
+by Vule Gligorievi&#263;, his representative in those parts,
+to Prince Milo&#353;, who was at Kragujevac, enclosing a
+supplication from the priests and other inhabitants of the
+large Roumanian island called Veliko Ostrvo, in the
+middle of the Danube, praying that they might be allowed
+to cross to Serbia. "We are in great misery," they wrote,
+"and have boyars who are very bad, and we cannot bear
+the misery in which we find ourselves, and in the greatest
+grief we beg your Highness to let us come to Serbia with
+our wives and children." The Prince had a special
+sympathy for Roumania and was therefore most reluctant
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>to intervene in her internal affairs. He adopted
+a very cautious attitude in this matter, but when Gligorievi&#263;
+sent him petition after petition he was finally
+so touched by the recital of their woes that he permitted
+them to cross the river; and one night, with the help
+of the Serbian authorities, the whole island crossed over,
+to wit 57 families, with 186 oxen, 70 horses, 694 sheep
+and 87 pigs. Milo&#353; made them a free grant of land for
+the building of a village, together with a vast stretch
+of territory for pasture and stock-raising; at his own
+expense he built them a church and extended to them all
+the liberties and advantages enjoyed in Serbia by the
+Serbs themselves. As a token of their gratitude these
+Roumanian emigrants called their village Mihailovac, after
+the name of Michael, the Prince's son. This village is
+the birthplace of our friend Dr. Athanasius, whose
+sentiments appear to have placed him in a minority of
+one. When his pamphlet came into the hands of Jorge
+Korni&#263;, the mayor of Mihailovac and a Roumanian by
+origin, he brought it to the prefect at Negotin saying that
+he wished to have nothing to do "with any devil's work."</p>
+
+<p>As Dr. Athanasius and his chauvinist friends give a
+pretty lurid picture of the Roumanian villager who lives
+in Serbia, I visited a few places where the population
+is wholly Roumanian or Serbo-Roumanian. The 766
+inhabitants of Ostralje are all of Roumanian descent,
+the mayor being one Velimir Mi&#353;kovi&#263;, a sergeant of
+reserves who has been transferred from the army in
+order to carry on his municipal duties. All the inhabitants
+speak Serbian and Vlach. "We were always
+Serbs," they said. "Nobody told us that we had
+migrated to this place." And amongst those who
+assembled to talk with us at the schoolmaster's house
+there was only one who, in the Roumanian fashion, had
+drawn his socks over his white trousers. The 2221 inhabitants
+of the village of Grljan are about two-thirds of
+Roumanian and one-third of Serbian origin. Formerly
+they each had their own part of the village, but now they
+are intermingled both in the village and in the cemetery.
+They intermarry freely; thus Jon Jonovi&#263;, the most
+notable person, who used to represent this district in the
+Skup&#353;tina at Belgrade, has three Serbian daughters-in-law.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
+He was a member of the Opposition Liberal
+group of Ribarac. "And did you ever request that your
+fellow-countrymen should have their own Roumanian
+schools and churches?" we asked. This is one of the
+chief demands of Dr. Athanasius. "I was not the only
+Roumanian who was a deputy," said the old man of the
+furrowed face. "There was Novak Dobromirovi&#263; of Zlot;
+there was Jorge Stankovi&#263;, for instance; but we never
+thought of asking for such a thing, since we had no need
+for it." The son of the wealthy Sima Yovanovi&#263; at Bor
+observed with a smile that the first business of Roumanian
+schools would have to be the teaching of Roumanian.
+"My father sent me to be educated at Vienna," he said,
+"and when I met some boys from Bucharest we found
+that our language was so different that we had to talk
+to one another in German. And now when a commercial
+traveller comes here from Roumania I have to talk
+German to him, as I would otherwise have to converse
+with my hands and feet." The French mining officials, by
+the way, at Bor testified that they had never heard of any
+tension between men of Serbian and those of Roumanian
+origin; the Roumanians, who prefer agricultural work, are
+more attracted to the mines in winter, when over 40 per
+cent. of the 1500 employ&eacute;s are Roumanians.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Athanasius and his friends are agitated, as one
+would imagine, when they discuss with you the numbers
+of their countrymen. In <i>Le Temps</i> of April 22, 1919,
+they declared that they could produce 500,000, for they
+realized that their previous claim of between 250,000 and
+350,000 was not large enough to give the Roumanians in
+Serbia the benefit of the principle of nationality. But
+even this more modest figure will be found, on examination,
+to be exaggerated. In the four north-eastern
+counties of Serbia there were 159,510 Roumanians in
+1895; 120,628 in 1900, and in 1910 a little over 90,000.
+This diminution, say the chauvinists, is due to a falsifying
+of statistics, for those, they say, who have attended
+a Serbian school are inscribed as Serbs. The truth is
+that everyone is entered according to his mother-tongue.
+And history knows countless instances of a gradual
+decrease in the case of people placed in foreign surroundings
+and exposed to foreign influences. Like the Illyrians who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
+people Dalmatia, the Thracians of ancient Dacia and the
+Serbs who emigrated to Russia in the seventeenth century,
+the Roumanians of Serbia are undergoing this process
+and are inevitably becoming Serbicized. Frequently we
+noticed that men possessing no Serbian blood did not care
+to admit their Roumanian origin, which, however, is no
+secret to their neighbours in spite of the Serbian termination
+"i&#263;" that, in the course of years, has been affixed
+to their names. An allusion to their origin is clearly
+regarded as lacking in delicacy. "Well, my ancestors
+were Roumanian," is often as much as they will admit.
+And when some enterprising agitators came over from
+Roumania to the department of Po&#382;arevac in 1919, the
+Roumanians of those parts gave up to the authorities all
+those who did not manage to escape. For ten years
+Lieut.-Colonel Gjorge Markovi&#263; commanded the 9th
+Regiment, which is chiefly formed of Roumanians from
+that region. They used to tell him that they wanted
+to have nothing to do with the Roumanian boyars.
+"Here we are boyars ourselves," they said. All of them
+speak Serbian, many of them write it; and on winter
+evenings they have for years received instruction in
+reading, writing, arithmetic and singing, which compares
+favourably with Roumania's army, in which, as I was
+told at Bucharest, the plan of starting any education
+had to be postponed in consequence of the outbreak of
+the Great War. Together with the unwillingness of
+these people to acknowledge their origin, one observes
+a general vagueness as to the home of their forefathers.
+Apparently these came over from southern Hungary,
+whence the name Ungureani,<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> or from Tara Rumaneasca,
+<i>i.e.</i> the Roumanian land, whence the name Tarani.
+Others again are descended from Roumanized Serbs
+who came from Kossovo and other Serb regions of the
+south, lived in the Banat and Transylvania among the
+Roumanian villages, acquired the Roumanian language
+and then crossed over to Serbia. These three classes have
+all come to Serbia in recent times. Any attempt on the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>part of Dr. Athanasius and his friends to drag in the
+Romans can be answered by the undoubted fact that the
+ancient Roman colonists had completely disappeared
+from Serbia as far back as the fifteenth century, leaving
+no trace at all, and there is no connection between them
+and the present Roumanian population of Serbia. No
+memories remain of the old Roman colonists, save certain
+place-names which, as Professor Georgevi&#263; remarks,
+strike one as surprising in the midst of a purely Serbian
+population. It is interesting to note that these ancient
+Roman place-names are very rare in the regions inhabited
+to-day by men of Roumanian origin.</p>
+
+<p>It would not have been worth whole devoting so much
+space to the activities of Dr. Athanasius and his adherents
+but for the fact that European public opinion, which has
+concerned itself extremely little with the Roumanians
+of Serbia, might possibly imagine that their advocate
+deserves to be taken seriously.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">2. THE BANAT</p>
+
+<p>Anyone who looks at an ethnological map of the Banat
+will recognize how difficult it is to partition that province
+among two or three claimants. No matter by whom
+the map is painted, it must have the appearance of mosaic,
+with few solid masses of colour. This fact was quickly
+used by the Roumanians, who argued that as the Banat
+had never been divided, neither politically nor economically,
+it should still remain one whole&mdash;of course under
+the Roumanian flag. The Magyars haughtily pointed
+out that as the Banat had never been divided, but had
+for a thousand years lived under the crown of St. Stephen,
+it should still remain one whole&mdash;of course under the
+Hungarian flag. The Roumanians contended that the
+indivisibility of the Banat was designed by Nature,
+since the mountainous eastern part could not exist if
+separated from the fertile west. The Magyars asserted
+that it was altogether wrong to think of the radical
+remodelling and complete dismemberment of a territory
+which Nature had predestined to be one. The Yugoslavs
+agreed with both parties that it was not easy to draw a
+satisfactory frontier, but they asked that, as far as possible,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
+the predominantly Roumanian parts should be joined
+to Roumania, the Slav populations to them and the
+Magyars to Hungary. As a matter of fact the Paris
+Conference did attempt to make an ethnical division,
+between these three States, of the Banat. Roumania
+tried to demonstrate the impossibility of this by turning
+off the water in the Bega Canal when the Serbs evacuated
+Teme&#353;var and were taking their heavily-laden barges
+from that town. There will have to be a central, international
+organization to control the network of waterways.
+As soon as the Paris Conference had decided on
+this division it was told by the Magyars, the Roumanians
+and the Yugoslavs that all the numerous Germans of the
+Banat wished to belong to Hungary, to Roumania and
+to Yugoslavia. A great many of the Germans were
+indifferent, so long as they could peaceably carry on their
+prosperous agricultural operations. Not much political
+solidarity is apparent among the Germans of the Banat,
+and seeing that both Yugoslavia and Roumania, now
+the principal possessors of this land, have elsewhere
+within their boundaries large German populations, their
+respective Banat Germans will be able to ally themselves
+with these in the Parliaments of Belgrade and Bucharest.
+The Banat Germans who are discontented with the Paris
+decisions are firstly those, among the aristocratic and
+commercial classes, who were accustomed to enjoy under
+the Magyars a favoured position, and secondly those who,
+with more or less justification, say that Roumania has
+yet to show that she will treat her subject minorities in
+a truly liberal fashion. It is for this reason that the
+Germans of Ver&#353;ac and Bela Crkva&mdash;in which towns
+they are about as numerous as the total of Yugoslavs,
+Roumanians and Magyars&mdash;would give a majority in
+favour of Yugoslavia if they were asked to vote as to
+Yugoslav or Roumanian citizenship. <i>Adeverul</i>, which
+is one of the least chauvinist of Bucharest newspapers,
+claimed for Roumania at least the railway line: Teme&#353;var,
+Ver&#353;ac, Bela Crkva, Bazias&mdash;an argument thought to be
+conclusive being that the two central towns are neither
+Roumanian nor Serbian but German. This railway line
+was, as a matter of fact, bestowed by the Peace Conference
+on Roumania, and it required some strenuous<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
+work before this decision was modified. The French were
+suspected in Yugoslavia of leaning unduly towards the
+Roumanians, through sympathy with the Latin strain
+in their blood; yet it was the French who were for giving
+to Yugoslavia not only Bazias but the villages on the
+Danube down to Old Moldava, seeing that in those districts
+the Slavs are certainly in a majority. The Roumanian
+case was not assisted by Professor Candrea's ethnographical
+map, for in the debated country around Bela
+Crkva that gentleman, who told me that he had omitted
+every place whose population was less than a hundred,
+has unfortunately forgotten to include Zlatica, a village
+of 1346 inhabitants, which was founded at the gate of a
+monastery six hundred and sixty years ago. The population
+is according to the Hungarian census of 1910, at
+which time all the 1346 were Serbs, with the exception of
+220 Czechs and a few gipsies. Professor Candrea has
+forgotten Sokolavac, a nourishing place about two hundred
+and fifty years old with 1800 inhabitants and practically
+all of them Serbs, as the Transylvanian Minister of Education
+admitted. Palanka with 1400 inhabitants, most
+Serbs; Fabian with about 1000, mostly Czechs; Duplaja
+with 1204, all Serbs but for 10 Slovenes; Crvena Crkva
+with 1108 (1048 Serbs, 34 Slovaks, 17 Germans and 9
+Magyars), are every one omitted. Lescovac, with 977
+inhabitants, the Professor marks as Roumanian. When I
+was at this picturesquely situated place I was received
+in the mayor's office by half a dozen burly peasants in
+the Serbian national costume who asserted that, with
+the exception of the tailor (a Roumanian emigrant) and
+one or two other persons, the village was wholly Serb.
+But Lescovac was then within the Serbian sphere of
+occupation, and possibly if I were to go there now I would
+be told an appropriate story by other, or the same,
+peasants in Roumanian attire. One must try to find
+some surer indication of nationality, and Professor Candrea
+told me that twenty-five years ago he took down a pure
+Roumanian text at that place, where the Roumanian
+language is the most antique in the Banat. On the
+other hand, the village must have contained many Serbs,
+for when the late notary, a powerful Magyar with
+Roumanian sympathies, prevented the school being conducted,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
+as it always had been, in the Serbian language,
+and installed a teacher&mdash;he stayed for eight years&mdash;who
+could only speak Magyar and Roumanian, the villagers
+at their own expense procured a Serbian school-mistress.
+She was expelled by the notary.... This illustrates
+the difficulties which the Peace Conference, in its desire
+to trace an ethnical frontier, was confronted with. And
+there was no map which did not make it obvious that
+Serbian villages would have to remain to the east and
+Roumanian villages to the west of any possible line.
+They did right, I think, to revise their decision as to the
+towns of Ver&#353;ac and Bela Crkva, for there the Yugoslavs
+and their German friends have a large and unquestioned
+preponderance. Bazias, with about three miles of the
+railway, was given to Roumania so that she should have,
+for the exportation of her wood and iron-ore, the only
+harbour in that region of the Danube which is capable of
+development. However, with no railway over Roumanian
+soil from Bazias to the mines, this port is perfectly useless,
+and it is to be hoped that Roumania will give it up, for
+compensation elsewhere, to the Yugoslavs. The latter
+would otherwise be compelled to build three or four
+miles of railway, from Bela Crkva to Palanka, which,
+unless a great deal of money be spent on it, will always
+be one of the worst ports on the river. With a little more
+difficulty than to Bazias the Roumanians could construct
+a railway to Moldava, which also is a very good port;
+and in return for this accommodation, whereby the
+wines of Bela Crkva could be shipped from Bazias, their
+natural port, the Yugoslavs would be ready to make over
+to Roumania one or two villages whose population far
+exceeds that of little Bazias. We may also hope that
+facilities will be given by the two Governments for the
+emigration of those who wish to cross the new frontier
+line. Formerly the people of the Banat had no strenuous
+objections to being moved, lock, stock and barrel, from
+one district to another and without the inducement of
+coming under the rule of their own race. Thus the
+village of Zsam, to the north of Ver&#353;ac, was, like many
+others, very sparsely inhabited when the Turks withdrew
+in 1716; some villages had only three or four occupied
+houses. So the Government in 1722 collected into one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
+village the people of several others, and in this way Zsam,
+which had hitherto been Slav, became Roumanian, the
+Serbs being established in the neighbouring Sredi&#353;te.
+In 1809 the Roumanians were transplanted from Zsam
+to Petrovasela, between Ver&#353;ac and Pan&#269;evo, where
+they entered the Pan&#269;evo Frontier Regiment; their
+place at Zsam was taken by Germans, who, being more
+industrious, were preferred by the landowners.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the delineators of this frontier&mdash;French and
+British&mdash;have told me that they were guided throughout
+by the ethnical principle. But various unfortunate
+exceptions seem to have been made: for instance, at
+Ko&#269;a it runs through a certain house in such a way that
+the lavatory alone is in Roumania; and in another village
+there lives a man who, since his stables are situated in
+Roumania, would have had his horses requisitioned if
+he had not been able to bring them into the other part of
+the house. Another village has its cemetery in Roumania,
+so that the Yugoslavs carry their dead friends over during
+the night. Perhaps the Entente officials, perceiving that
+their ambitious resolution to divide the country on
+ethnic principles was not feasible&mdash;there would always
+be alien islands to the right and to the left of any line&mdash;perhaps
+they in despair drew an arbitrary line upon a
+map and hoped the poor inhabitants would make the
+best of it. But this was rendered more difficult by the
+Yugoslav and Roumanian authorities, for the people who
+desire to cross the line are put to endless trouble. Apart
+from the expense, it usually involves a delay of three
+weeks before permission can be obtained, so that the
+frontier is rarely traversed save by smugglers and by
+those who, like the afore-mentioned man of Ko&#269;a, have
+been driven into chronic lawlessness.</p>
+
+<p>The first line agreed upon after the War, which
+temporarily bestowed the eastern county on Roumania,
+the western on Yugoslavia and the chief parts of the
+central (or Teme&#353;var) county also on Yugoslavia&mdash;with
+French co-operation&mdash;did not find favour in Paris;
+whether or not this decision was influenced by the frequent
+journeys of the Queen of Roumania and her fascinating
+daughters to that town I do not know. At all
+events another boundary was made which included the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
+large town of Teme&#353;var and all the northern part of that
+county in Roumania. It is true that there are Roumanian
+villages in the neighbourhood of this German-Magyar-Jewish
+town, which is by far the largest place in the
+Banat. And the Roumanians, who have already annexed
+enormous Magyar and German populations in Transylvania,
+do not boggle at another 80,000 foreigners.
+One could, however, find very few Yugoslavs who want
+Teme&#353;var to be restored to them; they know that they
+and the Roumanians, whatever (as regards themselves)
+may have been the case in other days, form, each of them,
+only about one-thirtieth of the total population. But
+they are sorry that the Allies asked them to share in
+occupying the town, because the local Serbs, who are
+interested in politics, were so enthusiastic, that on the
+arrival of the Roumanians they were forced to leave
+their businesses and go to live in Yugoslavia. Since
+neither Serbs nor Roumanians have any ethnical claim
+to the town one would suppose that, as the spoil had
+fallen to Roumania, the Entente would have endeavoured
+to give the Yugoslavs some compensation: what they
+did was to take away from them a good deal of that
+which they had&mdash;a considerable slice of their western
+county&mdash;which also was presented to the Roumanians.
+Again, the delineators excused themselves by invoking
+their ethnical motives, but as a matter of fact in that
+part of Torontal the people are predominantly German
+and they should have been allotted to Yugoslavia, not
+merely because the Teme&#353;var Germans were given to
+Roumania but on account of their economic existence,
+which certainly in the case of the departments of
+Nagyszentmikl&oacute;s, Perj&aacute;mos and Csene (to retain the
+Magyar spelling) is bound up with Zsombolya, their
+market-town, and Kikinda. According to the census
+that was taken in 1919, the population of these three
+departments now allotted to Roumania consisted of
+41,109 Germans, 13,638 Yugoslavs and 19,270 Roumanians.
+Further, to the south-east of Torontal, in the
+departments of P&aacute;rd&aacute;ny, M&oacute;dos and B&aacute;nlak, there is not
+so intimate a connection with the market-town; here
+the population consists of 12,209 Germans, 11,102 Yugoslavs
+and 8808 Roumanians. But there seems to be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
+little reason why the whole of Torontal, following the
+wishes of the majority of its inhabitants, should not be
+given to Yugoslavia; and this would also reduce to a
+minimum the inconveniences produced by any frontier.
+For many long years there has been a county frontier
+between Torontal and Teme&#353;var, each of which was
+under an official who looked direct to Buda-Pest. The
+adoption of this ancient county frontier as that of the
+two countries would put an end to the present absurd
+and unjust, not to say dangerous, situation. It should,
+therefore, be brought about as soon as possible.</p>
+
+<p>A similar rectification is needed in the country to
+the north and north-west. The three German villages
+of Komlo&#353;, Mariafeld and St. Miklo&#353; have their fields
+near Velika Kikinda, in Yugoslavia, whereas they are
+themselves in Roumania. To bring home his maize
+from the land a farmer was obliged to pay, at the most
+favourable rate, up to 200 crowns a pound. Considering
+that this part of the country is an absolute plain with no
+river flowing through it, one would suppose that a rectification
+could easily be made. If these Germans had
+been consulted they would naturally have opted for
+Yugoslavia. The Peace Conference officials might, also
+have studied Velika Kikinda, a place with a very creditable
+past, which&mdash;as I was told by a Serb professional
+man of that town&mdash;will be completely ruined if she loses
+the custom of these German villages and has to depend
+upon the Serb peasants who make one embroidered suit
+and one pair of sandals last them for ten years.... It
+will be necessary for the Yugoslav authorities in the
+Banat not only to endeavour to raise their countrymen's
+standard of living but also in the southerly districts,
+where the standard is higher, to persuade them not to
+persist in limiting their families. The Serbs in the old
+kingdom have been one of the most prolific of European
+races&mdash;they would otherwise have been incapable of
+carrying on their twenty-six years of war during this last
+century&mdash;but in the south and south-east of the Banat,
+perhaps through mere love of comfort, perhaps through
+Magyar oppression, there has been a marked tendency
+not to increase. The Magyars and Germans have had
+normal families, the Roumanians have increased by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
+assimilation (a woman marrying into a Serbian family
+will often cause them all to speak her easier language).
+The Serbs, however, will in their part of the Banat absorb
+the others if they show political understanding and a
+liberal spirit. "We will give the Germans," said Pribi&#269;evi&#263;
+to one of them at Ver&#353;ac&mdash;"we will give them everything
+up to a university."</p>
+
+<p>The north-west corner of the Banat, which has a
+considerable Magyar population, has been ascribed to
+Hungary. Opposite the apex of this triangular tract of
+country lies Szeged, the second city of Hungary (118,328
+inhabitants, of whom 113,380 are Magyars) and the chief
+centre of the grain trade of the rich southern plains.
+As was pointed out in <i>The New Europe</i>,<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> Szeged, which
+lies in flat country, would be even more defenceless than
+Belgrade if the lands on the other side of the river were
+under alien rule. If one draws a strategical frontier the
+nationality of the people is, of course, disregarded; it is,
+therefore, beside the point to mention that there seem
+to be far more Serbs in the angle opposite Szeged than
+there were Magyars in the lands opposite Belgrade.
+The Entente has simply made up its mind to be generous
+to Szeged, and let us hope that we have not left this
+region to Hungary on account of the activities of the
+extremely intelligent Baroness Gerliczy&mdash;a Roumanian
+lady married to a Magyar&mdash;who owns a large estate there
+and was much in Paris during the critical period.</p>
+
+<p>The other imperfections in the Paris arrangements,
+whether with regard to villages or fields, are not incapable
+of amendment. One presumes that the Roumanians,
+who have no lack of other international problems, will
+be wise enough to discard certain dicta of their Liberal
+party and of Bratiano, its self-satisfied leader, to whom
+all subjects seem great if they have passed through his
+mind. One particular dictum which the Roumanians
+ought to cast aside is that which insists upon the indivisibility
+of the Banat. Another Roumanian statesman,
+Take Jonescu, was more sagacious when he, during the
+War, drew up a memorandum whose object was that
+Greece, Serbia, Roumania and the Czecho-Slovak Governments
+should work in harmony. This idea of presenting
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span>a single diplomatic front was to the liking of Mr. Balfour,
+who observed to M. Jonescu that it would be better for
+these States and better for Europe. As regards an understanding
+between Roumania and Serbia in the Banat:
+"I," said Pa&#353;i&#263;&mdash;"I speak for Serbia. Can you speak
+for Roumania?"</p>
+
+<p>And Jonescu unfortunately had to shake his head.</p>
+
+<p>In the fatuous policy of crying for the whole Banat&mdash;they
+even require the little island in the Danube between
+Semlin and Belgrade&mdash;Bratiano is assisted by the aged
+Marghiloman, who is the chief of a branch of the Conservative
+party. But the relations between these two
+do not seem destined to be cordial, since Bratiano is
+married to Marghiloman's divorced wife.</p>
+
+<p>May the Roumanian people become reconciled to
+Yugoslavia's righteous possession of part of the Banat.
+It would be a pity if these two neighbours were to live
+together on such terms as, in the eastern county of the
+Banat, Caras-Severin, do the Bufani and the other
+Roumanians. The Bufani came from Roumania some
+hundred and fifty or two hundred years ago, on account of
+the taxes which they found intolerable; and they have
+not been able to arrive at amicable relations with those
+countrymen of theirs who are the descendants of earlier
+emigrants. Very seldom do the Bufani and the others
+intermarry. These Bufani, so say the others, are like ivy.
+"They called out," complain the others, "they called
+out: 'Little brother, be good to us!' and then they
+strangled us." The Bufani, who are easily recognizable
+by their dialect, frequent the same church and have one
+priest with the others, but they have a separate cemetery.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">(<i>e</i>) <span class="smcap">The Hungarian Frontier</span></p>
+
+<p>North of the town of Subotica the frontier between
+Yugoslavia and Hungary is almost a natural one, as it
+runs over vast hills of shifting sand which are still partly
+in motion. Neither on foot nor on horseback, still less
+with loaded carts, is it possible to travel through these
+hills. But to the east and to the west of them the frontier
+is no better than that which separates Yugoslavia from
+Roumania, and when it came to the delimitation the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
+Magyars thought it would be preferable if this work
+were done with their assistance. Otherwise, so they
+urged, there would be no check upon the wicked intolerance
+of their neighbours. It is true that they themselves
+had in the past been in favour of centralization, but
+against this one must remember that the "subject
+nationalities" were inferior beings. The Yugoslavs, the
+Roumanians and the Slovaks could not claim a glorious
+descent from Attila, of whom a fresco decorates the
+House of Parliament at Buda-Pest, and thus the Magyars
+had always thought it seemly that, by various devices,
+a limit should be put to the number of Yugoslav,
+Roumanian and Slovak deputies. Count Apponyi and
+his colleagues told the Peace Conference very frankly
+at the beginning of 1920 that it really ought to take their
+word for it, and not persist in looking on the Yugoslavs,
+etc., as if they were as good as any Magyar. Surely it
+was obvious that Yugoslavia, Greater Roumania and
+Czecho-Slovakia would be "artificial and improvised
+creations, devoid of the traditions of political solidarity
+and incapable of producing any." But if the Supreme
+Council was resolved to allow certain Magyar territories
+to join themselves, if they desired, to these ephemeral
+States it would be necessary to ascertain by means of a
+plebiscite what were the real wishes of the people in these
+territories; and Count Apponyi was kind enough to tell
+the Council very definitely how this plebiscite should be
+conducted. The principal Allies were to arrange, in
+accordance with the Magyar Government, as to the
+districts in which a plebiscite was to be held, and the
+secret voting was to be controlled by neutral commissions
+and delegates of the interested Governments. This may
+sound rather rash on the part of the Magyars, since a
+plebiscite, no matter how it was arranged and controlled,
+would <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'persumably'">presumably</ins> detach a good many jewels from the
+crown of St. Stephen, and it was not astonishing that
+Count Apponyi and his friends proposed that the Magyars
+should be safeguarded by further Commissions which,
+if requisite, would override the results of the voting.
+These results would indeed, as between the Magyars and
+the Yugoslavs, have given our Allies a larger dominion
+than they have actually obtained. The triangle south<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
+of Szeged, to which we have alluded, would certainly,
+if there had been a plebiscite, have gone to Yugoslavia.
+In Baranja the Yugoslavs have claimed that
+the census of 1910, which indicated 36,000 Serbo-Croats,
+should have given them 70,000; but this does not take
+account of the large number of &#352;okci&mdash;Slavs whose
+ancestors were forcibly converted to Catholicism and
+who came to consider themselves as one with the Catholic
+Magyars. This widespread phenomenon of race being
+superseded by religion may be noticed, for example, at
+Janjevo in the district of Old Serbia; it is inhabited
+by the descendants of Dubrovnik colonists who, being
+Catholic, have come to look upon themselves as Albanians.
+In Hungary the dominant Magyar minority was wont
+to clasp the subject races to its bosom, not with bonds
+of love but of religion. Thus in 1914 at Marmoros-Sziget
+they charged 100 persons with high treason,
+because it was their wish to leave the Uniate Church, in
+communion with Rome, and return to the Orthodox
+faith. The same charge would have been preferred
+against certain Ruthenians who were just as unwilling
+to be members of the Uniate Church; but in the case of
+these humble, backward people the conversion had been
+effected by their priests, who would thereby procure for
+themselves a better situation, and the Ruthenians, who
+had not been told of this occurrence, were under the
+impression that they were still Orthodox. Professor
+Cviji&#263; believes that, with the help of the Catholic religion,
+no less than 113,000 Serbo-Croats have in Baranja been
+lost by their Yugoslav brethren.... When the Yugoslavs
+were asked by the Supreme Council to evacuate most of
+Baranja they did so. A republic, under the presidency
+of one Dobrovi&#263;, a well-known cubist painter, a native
+of those parts, was formed by Yugoslavs and the Magyars
+whose freedom had been safeguarded under their rule.
+But as this republic was not assisted by the Yugoslav
+Government it only lasted for a week.</p>
+
+<p>Farther to the west is the Prekomurdje, that interesting
+Slovene district which extends for about 25 miles
+along the Mur. The rich plain that adjoins the river
+is mostly in the possession of large landowners, while
+the hilly country to the north sustains a scattered and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
+poor population of Calvinists. There are in the whole
+Prekomurdje some 120,000 Yugoslavs, who are descendants
+of the old Pannonian Slovenes. This healthy,
+honest people has indeed eighteen Catholic and eight
+Protestant priests, but is otherwise almost destitute of
+an <i>intelligentsia</i>. They speak nothing but Slovene, and
+yet the Magyars had for ten years previous to the War
+been so imperialist that only Magyar schools were tolerated.
+Thus it happened that the children, like so many
+others in the Magyar schools, were at a loss to understand
+what they were writing, and if their teacher chanced
+to learn the Slovene language he was there and then
+transferred to Transylvania or the Slovak country or some
+other province where he had to teach his pupils in the
+Magyar which they did not know. He was supposed to
+make the children feel the vast superiority of all things
+Magyar, so that they should be ashamed to walk with
+their own fathers in the streets and speak another tongue.
+We are told occasionally in the <i>Morning Post</i> that consideration
+should be shown to the Magyars since they are
+a proud people, but would they not merit more consideration
+if they were a grateful people, grateful that the rest
+of Europe, overlooking their Mongolian origin, has
+accepted them as equals? The Magyars were so
+thoroughly persuaded of their own pre-eminence that
+when the devotees of Haydn founded in his honour a
+society at Eisenstadt, where he had worked, it was
+allowed on the condition that the statutes and the name
+of the society and so forth should be in the Magyar
+language, although Haydn was a German. Evidently
+the poor Slovenes of the Prekomurdje would be swamped
+unless they showed exceptional vigour. And when they
+managed to survive until after the War the Americans
+in Paris were for handing them to Hungary on the ground
+that the frontier would, if it included them in Yugoslavia,
+be an awkward one. Such is also the opinion of Mr.
+A.&nbsp;H.&nbsp;E. Taylor in his <i>The Future of the Southern Slavs</i>;
+this author advocates that Yugoslavia should be bounded
+by the Mur, albeit in another part of the same book he
+says that "a small river is not usually a good frontier,
+except on the map"; and the Mur is so narrow that
+when Dr. Gaston Reverdy, of the French army, and I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
+arrived at Ljutomir we found that a crowd of these men
+and boys had waded across the stream in order to lay
+their cause before the doctor, who represented the Entente
+in that region. The Bol&#353;evik Magyars were just then
+threatening to set all Prekomurdje on fire, and the pleasant-looking,
+rather shy men who stood in rows before us
+begged the doctor to procure them weapons&mdash;they would
+be able to defend themselves. It is satisfactory to know
+that most of this portion of the Yugoslav lands has, after
+all, not been lost to the mother country.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">(<i>f</i>) <span class="smcap">The Austrian Frontier</span></p>
+
+<p>A considerable part of the frontier between Yugoslavia
+and Austria has been determined by a plebiscite which
+was held, under French, British and Italian control, in
+the autumn of 1920. The Slovenes during the previous
+year had pointed out that while they could no longer
+claim so wide a territory now that Austria had been
+drawn towards the Adriatic, yet the rural population
+of Carinthia had remained Slovene, thanks to the notable
+qualities of that people. The German-Austrians, on the
+other hand, maintained that country districts are the
+appanages of a town, so that the wishes of a rural population
+are of secondary importance. While these questions
+were being debated in 1919 by the two interested parties&mdash;and
+debated, very often, by their rifles&mdash;the Italians
+intervened. Sonnino's paper, the <i>Epoca</i>, made a great
+outcry over Klagenfurt (Celovec) which, if given to the
+Yugoslavs, would be an insurmountable barrier, it said,
+to the trade between Triest and Vienna, although it was
+clear that the railway connection through Tarvis remained
+in the hands of the Italians. (There is not a single
+Italian civilian in Tarvis&mdash;but no matter.) Meanwhile
+the French Press noted that the Italians&mdash;presumably
+not as traders but as benefactors&mdash;were seeing to it that
+the Austrians did not run short of arms and munitions.
+For many months a large area was in a condition of
+uncertainty and turmoil, till at last the Peace Conference
+ordered a plebiscite.</p>
+
+<p>Two zones in Carinthia&mdash;"A" to the south-east,
+with its centre at Velikovec (V&ouml;lkermarkt), and "B" to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
+the north-west, with its centre at Klagenfurt (Celovec)&mdash;were
+mapped out, and it was agreed that if the voting
+in "A," the larger zone, were favourable to Austria,
+then the other zone would automatically fall to that
+country. For several months before the voting day this
+area&mdash;a region of beautiful and prosperous valleys watered
+by the broad Drave and surrounded by magnificent
+mountain ranges&mdash;for several months this area was the
+scene of great activity. German-Austrians and Yugoslavs
+no longer, as in 1919, attacked each other with the
+implements of war, but with pamphlet, broadsheet,
+with eloquence and bribery. Austrian and Yugoslav
+officials took up their headquarters at various places and
+saw to it that every voter should be posted as to the moral
+and material advantage he would reap by helping to
+make the land Austrian or Yugoslav, as the case might
+be. All those were entitled to vote who, being twenty
+years of age in January 1919, had their habitual residence
+in this area; or, if not born in the district, had belonged
+to it or had their habitual residence there from, at least,
+January 1, 1912. The larger zone "A" was left under
+Yugoslav administration, while zone "B" was under
+the Austrian authorities; and the Inter-Allied officials
+exercised a very close supervision in order, for example,
+to protect the partisans of either side from undue repression
+at the hands of their opponents. Neither the
+Austrians nor the Yugoslavs lost any opportunities for
+saying in public that the Inter-Allied Commissions were
+honestly making every effort to be impartial. It was,
+however, unfortunate that Italy should have sent as her
+chief representative Prince Livio Borghese, who may
+have been as impartial as his colleagues, but whose
+reputation, whether merited or otherwise, could scarcely
+commend itself to the Yugoslavs. They believed that
+his activities in Buda-Pest, under the Bol&#353;evik r&eacute;gime,
+and afterwards in Vienna, had been very hostile to themselves.
+Each of the three allied commissioners had a staff
+of some fifty or sixty officials, whose upkeep and expenses
+were paid by the two interested countries.</p>
+
+<p>If an average person had been asked to foretell the
+result of the plebiscite I suppose he would have said
+that in zone "A" the Yugoslavs and in zone "B" the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
+Austrians would be successful. We have seen how the
+Slovene renaissance of the nineteenth century was met
+by the central authorities in Vienna (particularly after
+the German victory of 1871), and how the local functionaries
+assisted them. They argued that Austria with her
+miscellaneous races could only survive if one of them
+was supreme. Therefore they looked askance on every
+one who regarded himself as a Slovene; if he rose to be
+an official it had to be in another part of the Monarchy,
+while for the maintenance of Austria (oblivious to the
+argument that Austria was a perfectly unnatural affair)
+they favoured all those who announced themselves to be
+on the side of the predominant race. From 1903 onwards
+the Slovene language was barred from the courts
+of Carinthia, and if a person did not understand the
+language of the German magistrates he had to use an
+interpreter. The land was invaded by the German
+<i>intelligentsia</i>: professors, masters in primary and
+secondary schools, doctors, lawyers and so forth, excise
+officials and railway officials&mdash;in 1912 Carinthia possessed
+about 5000 of these and only 1&frac12; per cent. were
+Slovenes. Those among the Slovenes who were capable
+of serving in such positions were dispatched to Carniola,
+Dalmatia or preferably to the German-speaking lands of
+the Empire. A provincial agricultural authority was set
+up in 1910 which was recognized by the State and which
+enjoyed a monopoly. Its object was to aid the progress
+of agriculture by establishing and supporting agricultural
+schools, sending experts to the farmer, distributing
+subsidies for the purchase of machinery, artificial manure
+and so on. The council consisted of twenty-one members,
+of whom only one was a Slovene; the subsidies were given
+to those who were recognized as Germanophils, while
+requests were not permitted in the Slovene tongue. As
+for the electoral districts, they were so manipulated that
+one deputy represented 120,000 Slovenes and another
+represented 27,000 Germans. Constituencies in which
+there was a German majority were allowed to send
+two members, while the others only sent one. The German
+railway employees worked so thoroughly for pan-Germanism
+that various Slovenes were arrested&mdash;among
+them the mayor of a large village who wanted to travel<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
+from Celovec&mdash;for asking in the Slovene language for a
+ticket. With regard to schools, there were throughout
+Carinthia in 1860 some 28 Slovene and 56 Slovene-German
+foundations, whereas in 1914 there were 2
+Slovene, 30 German and 84 mixed schools, where the two
+languages were supposed to co-exist; they were indeed
+the home of two languages, for the children were nearly
+all Slovene, whereas the teacher and the language he used
+were German. Among 230 masters only 20 could read
+and write Slovene. Qualified teachers who could satisfy
+this test were, as we have mentioned, sent to other parts
+of the Empire. So far did the system go that Slovene
+peasants upon whom the Government had forced a
+German education speedily forgot the two hundred words
+which they had learned, but as they had been taught no
+other script than the German they were accustomed to
+write the Slovene language with German Gothic characters.
+These peasants were fairly impervious to Germanization;
+their strong sense of national consciousness
+was supported by the books, religious and otherwise,
+which they received every year from some such
+society as that of St. Hermagoras at Celovec, which
+distributed half a million books a year among its 90,000
+members.</p>
+
+<p>But that which principally guided the peasant was
+the voice of his priest, and the vast majority of priests
+in zone "A" were Slovenes. This agricultural zone
+possesses no more than one or two small towns, where
+the priest is less <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'regarded,'">regarded.</ins> The traders and artisans
+frequently look upon themselves as too highly cultured
+for the Church; they affect the "Los von Rom" and
+the Socialist movements. By holding these menaces over
+the Bishop's head a good deal of pressure could be brought
+to bear, and this was done by the Germans, who were of
+opinion that the Church unfairly encouraged the Slovenes.
+The Bishop of Celovec had both the zones in his diocese
+until some months before the plebiscite, when a temporary
+arrangement was made under which zone "A"
+was administered by a vicar. But in bygone years the
+Bishop, with these threats hanging over him, was wont
+to counsel prudence and to ask his clergy not to agitate
+their flock, whom they were merely telling of their rights.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
+In zone "B," which mostly consists of the town of
+Celovec, the Church would naturally be more susceptible
+to German influence, apart from the fact that the Bishop
+himself is a Bavarian. For personal reasons&mdash;he is very
+imperfectly acquainted with the Slovene language&mdash;he
+wished even the clergy of zone "A" to correspond with
+him in German; but the priests pointed out that their
+faithful parishioners wanted to follow this correspondence
+and by far the greater number of them have no
+German.... In fact the Church has in each zone brought
+its help to the more powerful party&mdash;the Slovene peasants
+in zone "A" and the German or Germanophil townsfolk in
+zone "B"; and it appeared probable before the plebiscite
+that in both cases she would be on the victorious side.</p>
+
+<p>In foretelling the result of the plebiscite one would not
+pay much attention to the census which the German-Austrian
+officials used to take. A person was inscribed
+according to the language he ordinarily employed, and
+this was, more often than not, considered to be German
+if his superior was a German. Before the census of
+1910 the <i>Grazer Tagblatt</i>, which is the Germans' chief
+organ in those parts, proclaimed that the official census
+was a portion of the national propaganda. All the
+propagandist societies were entreated to do their utmost
+to induce the people to declare German as their usual
+language. Very humorous results were obtained. On
+December 18, 1910, the provincial council of public
+instruction gave out the number of German and Slovene
+children respectively in thirty Slovene parishes. Amongst
+them were the following:</p>
+
+<table summary="statistics" style="font-size: 90%">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>German Children.</td><td style="padding-left: 2em">Slovene Children.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 4em">Borovlje (Ferlach)</td><td class="leftalign"> 31 per cent.</td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-left: 2em"> 69 per cent.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 4em">Grab&#353;tajn (Grafenstein)</td><td class="leftalign"> 10&middot;6 <span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-left: 2em"> 89&middot;4<span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 4em">&#381;relc (Ebenthal)</td><td class="leftalign"> 24&middot;4 <span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-left: 2em"> 75&middot;6<span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 4em">Pokr&#269;e (Poggersdorf)</td><td class="leftalign"> &nbsp;&nbsp;1&middot;3 <span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-left: 2em"> 98&middot;7<span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 4em">Bistrica (Feistritz)</td><td class="leftalign"> 16&middot;2 <span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-left: 2em"> 82&middot;8<span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>And twelve days later the official census gave these
+results:</p>
+
+<table summary="statistics" style="font-size: 90%">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>Germans.</td><td style="padding-left: 2em">Slovenes.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 9em">Borovlje</td><td class="leftalign"> 90 per cent.</td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-left: 2em"> 10 per cent.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 9em">Grab&#353;tajn</td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 2em"> 50&middot;1 <span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-left: 2em"> 49&middot;9<span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 9em">&#381;relc</td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 2em"> 49&middot;2 <span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-left: 2em"> 50&middot;8<span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 9em">Pokr&#269;e</td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 2em"> 41&middot;1 <span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-left: 2em"> 58&middot;9<span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 9em">Bistrica</td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-right: 2em"> 44&middot;4 <span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td><td class="leftalign" style="padding-left: 2em"> 55&middot;6<span style="padding-left: 1em">"</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Far more trustworthy is the almanac issued every<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
+year by the Church, wherein a person's "usual language"
+is taken to be that in which he listens to the word of God.
+These ecclesiastical lists were published by German
+bishops, and according to them we find that the region
+we are considering held in 1910 some 40,000 Germans and
+123,000 Slovenes.</p>
+
+<p>We have seen that Celovec, like the smaller towns in
+this area, leans more to the Austrians than to the Yugoslavs.
+This is partly the effect of the Austrian Government's
+policy and partly of the various pan-German
+societies (<i>e.g.</i> the "K&auml;rntner Bauernbund," the "Verein
+der Alldeutschen," the "Deutscher Volksverein," etc.
+etc.), which, as was admitted, drew their funds to a considerable
+extent from Germany herself.</p>
+
+<p>The German Republic was very lavish in assisting
+her smaller Austrian sister during the period before the
+plebiscite, pouring both goods and cash into the district;
+and after the opening of the demarcation line between
+the two zones at the beginning of August they were able
+to introduce their supplies quite openly into zone "A."
+Very few Germans of the north believe that the German-Austrian
+Republic will permanently remain separated
+from themselves.... Both Yugoslavs and Austrians
+circulated vast quantities of printed matter; for the
+Yugoslavs the most convincing argument lay in Austria's
+apparently hopeless economic position and the undesirability
+of belonging to a State which had to pay so huge
+a debt; the Austrian pamphlets denounced the Serbs
+as a military race, though even such a dealer in false
+evidence as the eminent Austrian historian, Dr. Friedjung,
+would find it difficult to sustain the thesis that the wars
+engaged in by the Serbs during the last hundred years
+were more of an offensive than of a defensive character.
+In several prettily prepared handbooks the voters were
+implored by the Austrians not to be so old-fashioned as
+to plump for a monarchy when they had such a chance of
+becoming republicans; one could almost see the writer
+of these scornful phrases stop to wipe his over-heated
+brow after having pushed back his old Imperial and
+Royal headgear. You might imagine that the Austrians
+in their deplorable economic condition would have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
+avoided this topic; on the contrary, they proclaimed
+that several commodities which were lacking in Yugoslavia
+could be furnished by them in abundance. One
+of these, they said, was salt; and certainly the Yugoslavs
+purchased a good deal of it, but that was only when
+they did not know that it was German salt, which the
+Austrians bought in that country and on which they
+made an adequate profit. When the Yugoslavs wanted
+to get their supplies direct from Germany the Austrians
+introduced a transit tax of 1000 crowns&mdash;not the nearly
+worthless Austrian but Yugoslav crowns&mdash;per waggon.
+Later on when the Danube was thrown open and this
+tax could not be levied, salt was considerably cheaper in
+Yugoslavia than in Austria. So with plums&mdash;in 1919
+Austria bought nearly the whole of the exports from
+Yugoslavia at six crowns per kilo and sold them to Germany
+at eleven to twelve crowns, the profit going, so the
+authorities said, to the poor.</p>
+
+<p>As the day of the plebiscite approached, the Yugoslavs
+seemed to be more confident than the Austrians. The
+staunch peasants of zone "A" were not greatly impressed
+by the numerous appeals to their heart and brain which
+were handed to them by the Austrians in the Slovene
+language. And they were not much alarmed at the
+idea of being joined to their countrymen of the south,
+those unmitigated Serbs who thrived, if one was to
+believe the Austrian propaganda, on atrocities. But
+this warning was ridiculed by the Austrians themselves&mdash;on
+a market day at Velikovec you could see the Austrophils
+wearing their colours, which they would scarcely
+have done if they had been afraid of possible reprisals&mdash;and
+zone "A" was generally presumed to have a Yugoslav
+majority. On such a market day one saw very few
+Yugoslav colours in the farmers' button-holes, for it
+was the wish of their leaders to avoid anything which
+might give rise to unnecessary conflict. The day drew
+near and the Austrians thought that they were making
+insufficient progress; for one thing, they were at a disadvantage
+owing to the very low value of their money.
+They hoped that Germany would come with more zeal
+than ever to the rescue, and they hoped that something
+fatal would occur to Yugoslavia. So they asked the Inter-Allied<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
+Commissions to put it to their Governments that
+it would be advisable if the plebiscite were to be postponed
+for several months, say until May 1921. But it was
+reported that the French and British representatives
+declined to countenance the scheme. They may also
+have feared that if the period of canvassing were to be so
+long drawn out, the same passions would come to the
+surface as in the plebiscite in east and west Prussia,
+where in many places the Poles could not display their
+sympathies except at great personal risk. But in that
+particular plebiscite it must be noted that the Allies
+were very imprudent in confiding the maintenance of
+order to the rebaptized German Security Police, a body
+which was entirely in the hands of the reactionary clique.
+Yet the military precautions of zone "A" in Carinthia
+were not what they should have been, for when the Yugoslavs
+had lost the plebiscite an unrestrained horde of
+Austrian sympathizers, some of them from that zone
+and some from outside it, some of them civilians and
+some of them soldiers in mufti who made for certain
+places where supplies of weapons had been hidden,
+swarmed across the land and terrorized the Yugoslavs
+in such a fashion that a Yugoslav military force had to
+come in to protect them. "But how barbaric are these
+Yugoslavs," sneered their enemies, "for they refuse
+to recognize the result of the plebiscite." More than
+one diplomat in Belgrade was ordered to present himself
+at the Foreign Office and demand an answer why,
+etc. But the Yugoslavs had no intention of imitating
+d'Annunzio.</p>
+
+<p>Those who were not in the zone at the time of
+the voting might well be astounded at the result, which
+was an Austrian victory by 22,025 votes against 15,278
+for Yugoslavia. In view of the undoubted Yugoslav
+majority, it was felt that something more than active
+propaganda, before and during the election, had been
+brought to bear. For example, in the commune of
+Grab&#353;tajn (Grafenstein) the Germans are said to have
+inscribed on the electoral list 180 persons from Celovec
+and Styria who had no right to vote; they also asked
+that seventy strangers should be inscribed. On submitting
+these claims to the judgment of the district<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
+council the German leaders, even as the Yugoslavs, were
+required to initial each request; it is alleged that these
+initialled papers, which were attached to the claims, were
+left overnight in a room the key of which was in the
+keeping of the German secretary, Schwarz. He is charged
+with having removed the initialled papers from the Slovene
+claims and affixed them to the German claims. There
+was a large amount of more usual corruption. Thus it
+is known that twenty-eight Slovene servants at an important
+landowner's were unable to resist the material
+arguments and voted for the Germans. And if it is true
+that a number of people voted twice and even three
+times the Inter-Allied Commission fell short of its duties.
+It is said that the voting was so lax that if a stranger had
+been inscribed and did not turn up to vote, his legitimation
+was used by a native. Thus we are told of one
+Helena Rozenzoph, aged seventy-five, who was inscribed
+at Grab&#353;tajn. This woman had never existed; there had
+been a certain Barbara Rozenzoph who died in 1919, and
+her vote was used by Marjeta Hanzio, aged twenty-two
+years. The case was so flagrant that the Commission
+discovered it and the woman confessed to having acted
+on a note which she had received from the special Austrian
+<i>gendarmerie</i> force, the Heimatsdienst. The Commission
+seems to have been reluctant to take any steps against
+these frauds and it is not astonishing that the commune
+of Grab&#353;tajn registered 1290 votes for the Austrian
+Republic and only 380 for Yugoslavia, although in this
+commune of 3440 inhabitants there are no more than
+sixteen German families. A German majority was thus
+obtained in a province which Dr. Renner, the Austrian
+Chancellor, had acknowledged to be Slovene. It seems
+incredible that the Commission should have so completely
+broken down and the mystery may yet be cleared up,
+if as the Yugoslavia delegate requested, all the voting
+papers have been preserved.... But the <i>Hrvat</i>,
+the organ of the Narodny Club in Croatia (the decentralizing
+but strongly national party) blames Monsignor
+Koro&#353;ec, the leader of the Slovene clericals, for the
+disastrous plebiscite result. He would have been better
+employed, it says, in organizing his people than in
+gadding about Croatia, Bosnia, Herzegovina and Dalmatia<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
+for the purpose of extending his party. He had
+boasted that the Slovenes were so well organized that
+they were perfectly confident as to the issue. It would
+seem, however, says the <i>Hrvat</i>, that an unexpectedly
+large proportion of them are partly or entirely Germanized.
+And this, more than the above-mentioned
+irregularities, may be chiefly responsible for Yugoslavia's
+loss. One must also remember that many a Slovene
+would shrink from garrison duty in Macedonia, while it
+would be very natural for the Carinthian farmer to look
+up at the mountains that separated him from Carniola
+and then to recollect that Celovec (Klagenfurt), the
+economic centre of the whole area, would be Austrian.
+Nevertheless if zone "A" had been smaller&mdash;and more
+completely Slav&mdash;it is probable that the population
+would have risen superior to the various doubts which
+assailed them. What we have said about the Slovenes
+who have become Germanized is borne out by the
+<i>Koroski Slovenec</i>, a newspaper which appears in Vienna
+and which, though since its formation has been essentially
+hostile to the Austrians, tells us that after the plebiscite
+the Slovenes have only suffered real oppression from
+their denationalized compatriots. Difficulties arose with
+regard to the closing of Slovene schools, but this was
+largely due to the fact that many of the Slovene schoolmasters
+fled to Yugoslavia.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">(<i>g</i>) <span class="smcap">The Italian Frontier</span></p>
+
+<p>A Yugoslav barrister from Pola had gone to a neighbouring
+village&mdash;this was in 1920&mdash;for the purpose of
+encouraging the natives, who were all Southern Slavs.
+He asked them, in the event of their part of Istria being
+allotted to the Italians, not to lose heart but to wait for
+the day when justice would come by her own. In the
+middle of his exhortations a jovial old farmer approached
+him and slapped him on the back. "Cheer up, young
+man!" he exclaimed. "What is it that you are afraid
+of?" ... The Slav population of Istria and Gorica-Gradi&#353;ca,
+even as that of Dalmatia, has endured a great
+many things and is prepared to endure a great many
+more. Kindness would have gone a long way towards<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span>
+disarming them. If the Italians on the eastern Adriatic
+had been exponents of the Mazzini spirit rather than&mdash;which
+too often has been the case&mdash;of the direst
+Nationalist, then the Yugoslavs would have accepted&mdash;mournfully,
+no doubt, but <i>faute de mieux</i>&mdash;the frontier
+from the river Ar&#353;a in Istria which President Wilson
+suggested. This would have been a compromise frontier,
+by which 400,000 Slovenes and Croats would fall to Italy
+and a very much smaller number of Italians would fall
+to Yugoslavia. It would have satisfied the great sensible
+mass of the Italian people, but unfortunately was rejected
+by Baron Sonnino and his myrmidons. Far more was
+claimed by him, and the succeeding Italian Governments
+have had to struggle with the passions he so recklessly
+aroused. They have been unable to persuade the country
+that with the Ar&#353;a frontier they would be getting by no
+means a bad bargain. By the Treaty of Rapallo the
+Italians have obtained much more: the whole of Gorica-Gradi&#353;ca,
+portions of Carniola, the whole of Istria and
+contiguity with Rieka (which is made a free town), the
+islands of Lussin, Cres and Unie, sovereignty over a strip
+of five miles which includes Zadar (and a few adjacent
+islands), finally the southern island of Lastovo and
+Pelagosa which lies in the middle of the Adriatic.</p>
+
+<p>In November 1920 all the outside world was congratulating
+the Italians and the Yugoslavs on having,
+after many fruitless efforts of their statesmen, come to
+this agreement. The opinion was expressed that both of
+the contracting parties would henceforth be satisfied,
+since each of them was conscious that the other had
+accepted something less than his desires. It was noted
+that the Yugoslavs exhibited more generosity, as they
+gave up some half a million of their countrymen, while
+the Italians yielded in Dalmatia that to which they had
+no right. The Yugoslavs had, in the past two years,
+shown so much more forbearance than was usually expected
+of a vigorous young nation that the commentators
+for the most part fancied they would not waste any time
+in grieving over these inevitable sacrifices. It is freely
+said that if a liberal spirit is displayed by the Italians at
+the various points where they and Yugoslavia are in
+contact, both people will settle down, with no afterthoughts,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>
+to friendly and neighbourly relations. But it
+would be foolish to close our eyes to the fact that the
+position at Rieka and Zadar, not to speak of any other
+places, bristles with difficulties. At Rieka one hopes
+that the largest and wisest party, the Autonomists, will
+now come into their rights; no doubt a good many of
+those opportunist citizens who, at the time of the Italian
+occupation, developed into Italianissimi, after having
+previously been known as more or less platonic lovers of
+Italy, Hungary, or Croatia with ambitions chiefly centred
+on their native town, will presently assure you that in
+the Free State they are convinced Free Staters; but the
+local politicians have been living for so long in such a
+thoroughly oppressive atmosphere that most of those
+who have been prominent should for a season now retire.
+It will be difficult enough for this harassed port to settle
+down to business. As for the Zadar enclave, it is not
+easy to understand why an Italian majority in this little
+town should bring it under the Italian flag while the
+overwhelming Slav majorities of central and eastern Istria
+have been ignored. And with all the goodwill in the
+world the existence of this minute colony encircled by
+Yugoslav lands will scarcely make more easy the conduct
+of relations between Yugoslavia and Italy. It is naturally
+to the interest of both countries that misunderstandings
+and suspicions should be swept away. And from this
+point of view it is very doubtful whether the Italians
+were well advised in taking Zadar into their possession.
+Presumably the Government was forced to do so by the
+state of public feeling. They withstood this feeling with
+regard to the magnificent harbour of Vis, which even
+President Wilson suggested they should have, and contented
+themselves with the smaller Yugoslav island of
+Lastovo (Lagosta). The pity is that the Nationalists
+should have forced into their hands anything which may
+turn and sting them.</p>
+
+<p>It may be thought that we are excessively pessimistic
+in pointing rather to the dangers which the Treaty places
+on the tapis than to the good sense of those who will
+deal with them. We do not say that the Italians would
+have permitted their Government to solve the Adriatic
+question in a safer and more philosophic manner; but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span>
+we cannot look forward with that confidence we should
+have had if more sagacious counsels had prevailed.</p>
+
+<p>An arrangement most agreeable to the bulk of the
+interested population would have been effected if two
+Free States, instead of one, had been created: the small
+one of Rieka, and a larger one embracing Triest and the
+western part of Istria. There would be in each of these
+two States a mixed population, who would think with a
+shudder of the time when the grass was growing on their
+quays. Italians and Slavs, prosperous as of old, would
+very cordially agree that the experiment of being included
+in Italy had been at any rate a commercial disaster.
+[D'Annunzio's administration was, of course, a mere
+camouflage. Without the support of the Italian Government,
+which paid his troops though calling them rebels,
+the poet-adventurer could scarcely have lasted for a day;
+and the swarm of officers, many of them worse adventurers
+than himself, would have deserted him. Nor
+would the population of Rieka have listened to his glowing
+periods if the Italian Government had not, under cover
+of the Red Cross, sent an adequate supply of food into
+the town.] Both Rieka and Triest were, therefore, living
+under practically the same conditions, separated from
+their natural hinterland, and knowing very well that
+as Italian towns their prospects were lamentable. It
+was significant that the Italian Government should after
+a time have studied the scheme of constructing a canal
+from Triest to the Save. Before the War one-third of
+the urban population (and all the surrounding country)
+was Yugoslav; and now, when so many Yugoslavs have
+departed and so many Italians have arrived, even now
+it is certain that in a plebiscite not 10 per cent. would
+vote for Italy&mdash;and this minority would be largely made
+up of those <i>leccapiatini</i> (the "plate-lickers") who were
+the humbler servants of Austria during the War and are
+now begging for Italian plates. When the offices of the
+Socialist newspaper <i>Il Lavoratore</i>&mdash;the Socialists are
+by far the most important party in Triest&mdash;were taken
+by storm and gutted, the American Consul, Mr. Joseph
+Haven, and the Paris correspondent of the <i>New York
+Herald</i>, Mr. Eyre, happened to be in the building. They
+afterwards said that the attack by those ultra-nationalist<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
+bands, the fascisti&mdash;very young men, demobilized junior
+officers and so forth&mdash;was entirely unprovoked. The
+carabinieri gazed indifferently at the scene. Such is life
+in Triest, where the labour movement is gaining in
+strength every day. Its old prosperity has departed&mdash;there
+is hardly any trade or water or gas, since most of
+the coal was consumed, by order of the Italian authorities,
+in making electric light for illuminations. These were
+intended to show the city's irrepressible enthusiasm at
+being incorporated in the kingdom of Italy. But the
+inhabitants know very well that being one of Italy's
+many ports is worse than being the only port of Austria;
+they know that the most direct railways to Austria pass
+through Yugoslav territory, that henceforward the
+Danube will be much more largely used by Austria,
+Czecho-Slovakia and Hungary (none of whom had a seaboard)
+and that Rieka will now be a more formidable
+rival than of old.... So, too, at Pola we find that a
+majority of the population do not wish their town to be
+retained in Italy; a number of Italian workmen fled
+from the idle shipbuilding yards and actually came in
+1919 and 1920 with the Slovene refugees, their fellow-townsmen,
+to Ljubljana in search of employment. There
+are not sufficient orders to go round among such yards
+in Italy where, owing to the absence of coal and iron,
+this particular industry labours under great disadvantages.
+But if Rome considers that the retention of Pola is
+strategically essential, then in order to meet her wishes
+this town might be taken out of the Triest-Istrian Free
+State&mdash;maybe the Italians will be able to do something
+that will cause the citizens to cease regretting those
+good days of old when, as Austria's chief naval base, she
+flourished on the largesse of officers and men. But what
+can she do, and what could anybody do? Hundreds of
+houses are deserted; and for the year 1920 the owners
+of the theatre&mdash;which did not engage expensive actors
+but relied mainly on cinema&mdash;were faced with a deficit
+of 12,000 lire.</p>
+
+<p>The Triest-Istrian Free State would approximately
+contain, without Pola, some 300,000 inhabitants, half
+Italian and half Yugoslav. The formation of this State
+would be less advantageous to the Yugoslavs, for most<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
+of the big landowners and the shop-keepers are Italians
+who live on the Yugoslav peasants; but Yugoslavia,
+for the sake of peace, would be glad to see the State
+come into existence. Eastern and central Istria, forming
+a part of Yugoslavia and lying between the two Free
+States, should extend to Porto di Bado, which would
+cause it to possess about 3,000 Italians and 280,000
+Yugoslavs. If it were to be bounded by the Ar&#353;a it
+would make the Italians in the Triest-Istrian State
+become a minority.</p>
+
+<p>With respect to the indisputable Slav districts east
+of the Isonzo, <i>i.e.</i> the territory of Gorica-Gradi&#353;ca and
+an appreciable part of Carniola, which have been adjudged
+to Italy and which long to be joined to the Yugoslav
+State, there are two possible solutions. (In passing we
+may observe that there is no country where the national
+frontier is more clearly indicated. The linguistic frontier
+is so strictly defined that the peasant on one side of it
+does not speak Italian and his neighbour on the other side
+does not understand the Slovene tongue. Nevertheless,
+Signor Colajanni, the venerable leader of the Italian
+Republicans, took up an undemocratic point of view
+and declined to admit the argument of the superiority
+of numbers, when he alluded to this frontier in a speech
+to the Republican Congress at Naples. Waving numbers
+aside, he preferred to appeal to history and culture,
+though he should have known that the mass of the
+Slovene people is much better educated than the Italian
+peasant.) The true ethnographical boundary would be the
+Isonzo&mdash;not many Yugoslavs live to the west and not
+many Italians to the east of that river. Only in the town
+of Gorica do we find Italians. In 1910 at the census
+the Italian municipal authorities attempted to show that
+their town was almost entirely Italian; at a subsequent
+census the Austrians found that the returns had been
+largely falsified, and that in reality Gorica contained
+14,000 Italians and 12,000 Slovenes, while it is common
+knowledge that if you go 500 yards from the town you
+meet nothing but Slovenes. The prosperity of Gorica
+was mostly based on the export of fruit and vegetables
+from the Slovene countryside. In 1898 the Slovenes
+awakened, formed societies, started in business on a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span>
+large scale and boycotted the Italian merchants, who
+found themselves obliged to learn the Slovene language.
+Suppose that, for the sake of meeting the wishes of the
+Italian Nationalists, one half of the town were given to
+Italy, then that portion would be faced with ruin. It
+would, therefore, be advisable that the whole town
+should remain with its hinterland, and that Italy and
+Yugoslavia should be divided from each other by the
+Isonzo. But if this solution is impossible, then a large
+district east of the Isonzo should be entirely and permanently
+neutralized, which would not endanger the
+security of either State. Very different in character is
+the line Triglav-Idria-Sneznik, which the Italians hold
+ostensibly as a means of defence, but which is an offensive
+line against Yugoslavia, and primarily against Ljubljana
+and Karlovac.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt as the Italians in the eastern Adriatic have
+obtained a regular position by the Treaty of Rapallo
+they will henceforth do their best to win the love of
+their new subjects. They will disavow such officers as
+that one on the sandy isle of Unie who accused the
+Slav priest of propaganda, and in fact, as we have
+mentioned elsewhere, expelled him for the reason that
+inside his church, where they had been for many years,
+stood monuments of the two Slav apostles, SS. Cyril
+and Methodus. St. Methodus was the wise administrator
+of these two&mdash;but even if he takes the rulers of
+the eastern Adriatic under his particular protection one
+must be prepared for them to fail in smothering, by their
+enlightened rule, the discontent which in the last three
+years has grown among the Yugoslavs to such acute
+proportions. It began, as we have noted, under the
+&aelig;gis of Baron Sonnino; the old neighbour, Austria-Hungary,
+had been Italy's hereditary foe, and the Baron's
+school could not bring itself to regard the new neighbours
+in a friendly light, although their house was so much
+less populated than that of their predecessors, not to
+mention that of the Italians themselves.</p>
+
+<p>There have been times during the last three years
+when a war between Italy and Yugoslavia seemed scarcely
+avoidable&mdash;the natives of the districts most concerned
+were looking forward to it with eagerness. At a Yugoslav<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span>
+assembly held in Triest in the summer of 1919 the other
+delegates were electrified by two priests from Istria who
+declared that their people were straining at the leash,
+anxious for the word to snatch up their weapons. (Many
+of these weapons, by the way, were of Italian origin, as
+there had been no great difficulty in purchasing them
+from the more pacific or the more Socialistic Italian
+soldiers; the usual price was ten lire for a rifle and a
+hundred rounds.) If there should come about a war
+between Italy and Yugoslavia, then it is to be supposed
+that the Yugoslavs will afterwards take as their western
+frontier the old frontier of Austria (except for the Friuli
+district, south of Cormons, which they do not covet,
+since they look upon this ancient race as Italian.)</p>
+
+<p>By signing the Treaty of Rapallo the Yugoslav Government
+has shown that it is ready to go to very great lengths
+in order to establish, as securely as may be, an era of peace.
+It would be just as creditable on the part of the Italians
+if they will consent to Istria being partitioned in the way
+we have suggested, for they have been wrongly taught
+to think themselves entitled to this country, and to believe
+that the inhabitants, as a whole, are glad to be Italian
+subjects. "You may suppose we are unpatriotic," the
+Austrian railway officials of Italian nationality used to
+say, "but as Austria gives much better pay than we
+should receive from Italy, we prefer that this part of the
+world should be Austrian."</p>
+
+<p>The relations between Italy and Yugoslavia have been
+treated at some length, for it would require but little to
+bring a gathering of storm-clouds to the sky. One even
+hears of Roman Catholics in Istria and elsewhere abjuring
+their Church and&mdash;for the national cause&mdash;adopting the
+Serbian Orthodox faith. Twenty years ago it happened
+that two Istrian villages, Ricmanje and Log, went over
+to the Uniate and thence to the Orthodox Church. This
+was on account of a quarrel with the Bishop of Triest, who
+wanted, against the wishes of the people, to remove their
+priest, Dr. Pojar. But now we have priests in the provinces
+given to Italy who are openly calling on their
+flock to go over with them to their Orthodox brothers;
+and this is a movement which, it is thought, will merely
+be postponed by the introduction of the Slav liturgy.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span>
+To take a single sermon out of many, we may mention
+one which in the summer of 1920 was preached in a church
+of the Vipava valley. The clergyman, after lamenting
+that the chief dignitaries of the Roman Catholic Church
+are Italians, gave it as his opinion that there was nothing
+to choose in point of goodness between that particular
+Church and the Orthodox Church. "And," said an old
+peasant who came to Triest with the story of what had
+happened, "never in my life did I hear so fine a sermon
+and one that did me so much good."</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> The Italians had originally landed a "hygienic mission" at Valona
+early in the European War, and this of course developed into something
+else. That ingenuous propagandist, Mr. H.&nbsp;E. Goad, tells us (in the
+<i>Fortnightly Review</i> of May 1922) that while Nature had made the innumerable
+deep-water harbours on the eastern coast of the Adriatic practically
+immune from Italy's attack, a landing or raid from one of them at Ancona,
+Bari or Barletta would be a vital blow at Italy, severing vital communications.
+He therefore justifies Italy's landing at Valona in that it was a
+purely defensive step, made to ensure that its harbour should not be used
+against her. He may hold that the seizure of one town is better than
+the seizure of none, but from the strategic and political point of view
+it would seem that Mr. Goad is an injudicious advocate.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> <i>Albaniens Zukunft.</i> Munich, 1916.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> <i>La Sera</i>, August 6, 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> <i>Giornale delle Puglie</i>, September 6-7, 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> The delegates of the League of Nations were told, at the beginning
+of 1922, by the authorities in southern Albania that it was iniquitous
+to believe that they would employ this kind of punishment for political
+refugees. Did they not advertise an amnesty to all those who returned
+within forty-five days? And in what newspaper, they indignantly asked&mdash;in
+what newspaper had they published the slightest threat of arson?</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> In the winter of 1921 this gentleman was expelled from his country.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> <i>Albanesische Studien.</i> Jena, 1854.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> <i>Albanien und die Albanesen.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> But this is less rigorously upheld in the towns if it is a question of
+their honour or of cash. When, to give an example, Scutari was occupied
+by the Montenegrins at the beginning of the Great War, a Catholic Albanian
+merchant came to a Montenegrin lawyer and asked him to institute
+proceedings against another merchant who had gravely and publicly
+insulted him. The lawyer drew up the complaint, for which he charged
+the small sum of 20 perpers (= francs), but although his client was a
+wealthy man this fee appalled him; he resolved to take no further steps.
+In general, the Scutarenes prefer to suffer imprisonment rather than
+part with any money. And the willingness of the Albanians not to look
+a gift-horse in the mouth could often be observed at Podgorica between
+the years 1909 and 1912, when Nicholas of Montenegro would occasionally
+appear in the market-place with a supply of caps and other articles for the
+Albanians. These he would distribute, having first exclaimed: "Ka&#269;ak
+Karadak Kralj Nikola barabar!" (that is to say, "The Albanian and
+the Montenegrin are equal in the eyes of King Nicholas!"). Ka&#269;ak is
+a word meaning a brigand, an outlaw; the Montenegrins apply it to
+their neighbours, and these latter, throwing their new caps in the air
+and cheering for Nikita, did not mind what he called them.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> <i>Turkey in Europe.</i> London, 1900.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> <i>Ein Vorstoss in die Nordalbanischen Alpen.</i> Vienna, 1905.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> <i>Italy in the Balkans at this Hour.</i> Naples, 1913.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> <i>L'Albanie Independente</i>, by Dukagjin-Zadeh Basri Bey. Paris,
+1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> Cf. the <i>New Statesman</i>, February 5, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> When the Serbian troops arrived at Pri&#353;tina in the Balkan War
+they discovered among the inhabitants of that place a man who had not
+left his house for some fourteen years. We are told (in <i>The Complete
+Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland</i>, etc., vol. v. London, 1921) of my
+Lord Eyre of Eyrescourt in County Galway "that not one of the windows
+of his castle was made to open, but luckily he had no liking for fresh air."
+Yet probably his lordship's countenance had not the pallor of the man
+of Pri&#353;tina, because "from an early dinner to the hour of rest he never
+left his chair, nor did the claret ever quit the table."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> When this account of the incident was published in my small book,
+<i>A Difficult Frontier</i>, it caused a reviewer, one I.&nbsp;M., in <i>The Near East</i> to
+observe, that I "can be jubilant when a Montenegrin in Yugoslav pay
+insults a British officer, Captain Brodie." Since the Editor permits such
+hopeless nonsense to appear in his columns one may be excused, I think,
+for not taking <i>The Near East</i> very seriously. It is not worth while informing
+them how General Phillips of Scutari dealt with Captain Brodie.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> Referring in the <i>Nation and Athen&aelig;um</i> to Sir Charles's latest work,
+<i>Hinduism and Buddhism</i> (3 vols.), Mr. Edwyn Bevan says that "for a
+lonely student, who had done nothing in his life but study, the book would
+have been a sufficiently remarkable achievement. That a man who has
+been an active public servant and held high and responsible offices
+should have found time for the studies which this book presupposes is
+marvellous. It is a masterly survey.... There can be few men who
+have Sir Charles's gift of linguistic accomplishments, who can not only
+read Sanskrit and Pali, but know enough of the Dravidian languages of
+Southern India to check statements by reference to the original writings,
+and add to this a knowledge of Chinese and Tibetan."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> Cf. pp. 72-73, Vol. I.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> Cf. <i>Manchester Guardian</i>, February 28, 1919.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> Cf. <i>A Political Escapade: The Story of Fiume and D'Annunzio</i>, by
+J.&nbsp;N. Macdonald, O.S.B. London, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> Cf. <i>Tribune de Gen&egrave;ve</i>, October 13, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> Those who are curious as to the gentleman's antecedents may like to
+refer to my book, <i>Under the Acroceraunian Mountains</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> Cf. <i>La Suisse</i> (of Geneva), October 13, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> Cf. <i>Journal des D&eacute;bats</i>, October 15, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> This would be about 18,000 lb. avoirdupois.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> Cf. p. 283, Vol. II.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> Cf. <i>Morning Post</i> of December 14, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> Cf. <i>Le Temps</i>, November 11, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> "Who is this anonymous idiot?... He really ought to have known
+better than that," says a reviewer in <i>The Near East</i>. I quite agree. It is
+pleasant now and then to be able to agree with a paper which is so one-sided
+as to admit pro-Nikita and anti-Serbian diatribes by Mr. Devine,
+but which refuses to insert a letter on the other side. "Let us not mix
+ourselves up in their domestic affairs," said the Editor to me after an
+hour's conversation. And though it is a matter of no importance, I may
+mention that he employs a reviewer who, referring to the map in my
+book, <i>A Difficult Frontier</i> (Yugoslavs and Albanians)&mdash;a map which is most
+conspicuously printed opposite the title-page&mdash;observes that it "is hidden
+in one unostentatious page, which at first sight escapes the reader's
+attention altogether."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> In the <i>Samouprava</i> of November 12 the whole case was discussed
+with his usual lucidity by Dr. Lazar Markovi&#263;, one of the ablest and most
+philosophic men in Yugoslavia. This ex-Professor of Law is now the
+Minister of Justice, and it is to be hoped that he will eventually succeed
+in the place of Pa&#353;i&#263;.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> Those who like to hold the Serbs up to contumely have not a very
+strong case when they denounce them for now being on friendly terms
+with the Christian Mirditi, whereas they used to be the friends of Essad
+Pasha; this personage was at that time the man whose national Albanian
+policy had the greatest chance of success. He was the one man who
+then appeared capable of establishing a State in which Christians and
+Moslems would be fairly represented. But now too many of the Moslem&mdash;and
+not only they&mdash;have adopted an Italophil attitude which is sadly
+anti-national.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> A later phase was for the Government to recognize that what Albania
+must have is the friendship of Yugoslavia, so that the eyes of the most
+powerful Ministers were turned from Rome to Belgrade. Thereupon the
+Italians, loth to lose their footing in the country, gave their patronage to
+the anti-Governmental parties. It was pleasant to hear in the summer
+of 1922 that when the boundary commissioners had left a lamentable
+neutral zone between the two countries the Albanian Government suggested
+to the very willing Government of Yugoslavia that they should
+co-operate in cleansing that zone of its brigand population.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> December 16, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> According to the Geographical-Statistical Atlas recently published
+by the German Professor Hickmann the average loss among the belligerent
+countries, in killed, wounded and through diminution of the birth-rate,
+was 6&middot;5 per cent. At one end of the list of suffering nations is the United
+States with a percentage of 0&middot;4, Great Britain with 3&middot;7, and Belgium with
+4&middot;7. Roumania, Italy, Bulgaria and Turkey are all between 6 and 6&middot;5
+per cent. France has a percentage of 8&middot;5, Russia has 9, Germany 9&middot;3 and
+Austria 11. Above them all comes Serbia with the appalling percentage
+of 23.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> November 24, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> Cf. "G&eacute;ographie Humaine de la France" in the <i>Histoire de la Nation
+Fran&ccedil;aise</i>. Paris, 1920.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> Cf. <i>L'histoire illustr&eacute;e de la guerre de 1914</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> <i>L'Albanie en 1921.</i> Paris, 1922.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> <i>Under the Acroceraunian Mountains.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> M. Gabriel Louis Jaray. Cf. his <i>Les Albanais</i> (Paris, 1920) and his
+other writings on the Albanians.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> Cf. <i>A History of the Peace Conference of Paris</i>. Edited by H.&nbsp;W.&nbsp;V.
+Temperley, vols. iv. and v. London, 1921.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> Elias Regnault, <i>Histoire politique et sociale des Principaut&eacute;s Danubiennes</i>.
+Paris, 1885.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> The more advanced Roumanians of the plain also apply this term
+to their countrymen who live among the Roumanian mountains or, in
+Serbia, amid the heights of Po&#382;arevac and Kraina. It signifies a stupid
+fellow, one from the wilderness.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> February 13, 1919.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="IX" id="IX"></a>IX<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span></h2>
+
+<h3>CONCLUSION: A FEW NATIONAL
+CHARACTERISTICS</h3>
+
+<p class="subtitle"><span class="smcap">The Slovenes and the Serbs&mdash;The Montenegrins and the Serbs&mdash;The
+Croats and the Serbs&mdash;Serb and Bulgar.</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE SLOVENES AND THE SERBS</p>
+
+<p>Those who, for some reason or other, do not love the
+Yugoslavs will have said to themselves, before taking up
+this book, that they would certainly supply that searching
+criticism of this people which the author would omit.
+They knew it was unlikely that a man would write at such
+excessive length about the Southern Slavs if he had not a
+weakness for them, and if he predicted for their State the
+virtue of cohesion or more than very moderate tranquillity,
+his prejudice would have to be discounted. "The Yugoslavs,"
+said an Italian lady to me in London, and her
+beautiful lips looked as if they could scarcely bring themselves
+to pronounce the name, "the Yugoslavs," she
+said, "are very wild and black." If I have given the
+impression in this book that they are white, my fault will
+be much greater than the lady's, since I am not quite a
+stranger to them. Slovenes, Croats, Serbs and Bulgars&mdash;they
+have good and evil qualities so different that one
+must take them separately, and perhaps it will be more
+instructive to compare them with each other. The
+Slovenes need not detain us; they are a small people
+occupying a surprisingly large area; if they were less well
+organized they would have been long ago swallowed up.
+They shine as workers in the field and mine and forest
+much more than as military men. They have never
+been hereditary soldiers, like so many of the Croats, and
+it is perhaps this want of confidence in their own military<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span>
+prowess which has caused them to take measures that are
+sometimes too severe against the Austrians who are under
+them. The Bosnian Moslems assert that, as all their
+links with Turkey are now broken, they are the best
+Yugoslavs. But the Slovenes are also the best Yugoslavs,
+because they recognize that in Yugoslavia is their
+sole salvation. Some of us may regret that their tenacity
+so far outstrips their idealism. They are a careful people,
+as may be seen from Order No. 17024 which was issued,
+on December 4, 1920, by the Prefecture of Ljutomir.
+Referring to sequestered property, it enjoined that the
+Austrian owner should be allowed so much that he could
+live on it, but not so much as to enable him to be extravagant.
+They are also a relatively well-educated people;
+according to official statistics of 1910, 85&middot;34 per cent. of
+the Slovene population know how to read and write, while
+their neighbours to the east, the Magyars, can only
+reckon 62 per cent. and the Italians of pre-war Italy,
+62&middot;4 per cent. The most backward part of the Slovene
+race, those of Istria, have 46&middot;6 per cent. of illiterates,
+while there are Italian provinces where the illiterates
+amount even to 85 per cent. Rome itself counts 65 per
+cent.<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE MONTENEGRINS AND THE SERBS</p>
+
+<p>It will be profitable to compare the Montenegrins with
+the Serbs, because in our impatience with those persons
+who would keep them separate we may have seemed to
+imply that we believe them identical. The Serbs who
+maintained themselves in those mountains developed
+certain characteristics which differentiate them from their
+brothers. The Serb of the old kingdom walks, the Serb
+of the mountain struts. The magnificent Serbian warrior
+of the kingdom is so disciplined that although a Field-Marshal
+will sit down openly in a caf&eacute; and drink wine
+with some old comrade who is in the ranks, yet when the
+soldier is on duty his obedience is perfect. But if the
+Montenegrin private thinks that his officer has rebuked
+him unjustly, he will not hesitate to kill him. The Serb
+has a great respect for the national heroes, while every
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span>Montenegrin (for the sake of brevity we will use this term
+instead of "Serb of Montenegro," and imply, when using
+the word Serb, a Serb of the old kingdom)&mdash;as we have
+said, a Serb respects the national heroes, while every
+Montenegrin has a knowledge of his own ancestors for at
+least a hundred years. He is a chivalrous person who
+wishes to be treated as at least your equal. It was the
+Serbs' disregard of this sentiment which now and then
+gave umbrage to those Montenegrins who had expected
+that their union with the Serbs would cause an immediate
+return of the golden age. This was almost as offensive
+to the Montenegrins as the request that they would now
+contribute towards the support of the army. They had
+always left this to the Tzar&mdash;"We and the Russians,"
+they used to say, "are 150 millions." Not all the
+Montenegrins have managed to emancipate themselves
+from the thraldom of the clan. An amusing example of
+this was a major at Pe&#263; who belonged to the great Vasojevi&#263;
+family. He gave two of us a large lorry, which
+was the only car he had, and advised us to start very early
+and to take no one with us, except a guard, as the road
+to Mitrovica was in a soft condition. We started off with
+about twenty passengers, but only one of them, a Turk,
+had any luggage to speak of; and after we had gone a
+good part of the way we were held up at a military post.
+A Montenegrin captain, also a member of the Vasojevi&#263;,
+had overslept himself and ordered us by telephone to
+return for him. The Serbian lieutenant&mdash;who had risen
+from the ranks&mdash;asked at once if that order would come in
+writing, and when he received a negative answer he cut off
+the communication and wished us a happy journey. The
+Montenegrins also differ from the Serbs in their cultivation
+of the arts. They have no liking for songs of love, but
+say that men should only listen to the guslar and to hero-songs.
+They are severer and more dignified than the
+Serbs, and it will be some time before the average Montenegrin
+throws back his head in a railway carriage and
+rolls out a joyous song, as I once heard a Serb do in the
+Banat, whereupon another Serb in the far corner&mdash;they
+obviously had never met&mdash;joined in the song with great
+heartiness. The Montenegrin says that the Serb chatters
+like a gipsy (though we must not forget that, as Miss<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span>
+Durham remarked,<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> he is hurt if things Serbian are
+criticized by an outsider); he has been told that the
+Englishman is grave, like himself, and therefore he
+appreciates him from afar. But not many Englishmen
+(or Serbs) would care to indulge, like the Montenegrins,
+in the ceaseless recapitulation of time-honoured exploits.
+The younger folk are not so faithful to these ancient
+stories, but it is in Montenegro that performers on the
+one-stringed, monotonous guslar can most easily find an
+audience. The Serbs of the kingdom have become more
+eclectic in musical matters, though even with them the
+popular taste is in favour of the man who snores, on the
+grounds that he is hearty and robust. In so far as foreign
+influence is concerned, the Montenegrin has been to some
+extent affected by Italian culture, while that of Greece
+and Germany has acted on the Serb. But the Great War
+had an equally unfortunate influence on both of them.
+One must, however, mention that long before the War,
+and owing partly to Albanian influence, partly to their
+own struggle for existence and partly to other causes,
+the Montenegrins had shown themselves defective in
+straightforwardness. Undoubtedly they had deteriorated
+under the example of Nikita, but this unfortunate trait
+can also be discerned between the lines of the great poem,
+the "Gorski Venac," written in the first half of the
+nineteenth century. There used to be a certain amount
+of what we call theft in Montenegro, but the natives of
+that country, as of Albania, cherished rather communistic
+ideas; it seemed to them that they had a sort of right to
+that which another possessed, particularly if he was a
+near relative. After the War the Montenegrin was so
+much impoverished that he stole more freely, and the Serb,
+whose hands had hitherto been remarkably clean, took to
+the same habits and often in a very amateur fashion.
+Thus in a Macedonian village where a British army store
+had been rifled, the officers turned to the local priest, who
+was indignant with his people and conducted the officers
+into every house. Nothing was discovered, and the priest
+proposed that his own house should be searched. He
+was told that this was unnecessary, but he insisted; and
+when his careless wife led the way up a ladder into the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span>loft a British officer perceived at any rate one pair of khaki
+breeches. The patients of the Scottish Women's Hospital
+at Belgrade were so unpractised in the art of stealing
+that one of them&mdash;a typical case&mdash;returned one day to
+have her leg attended to, and in raising her skirt revealed
+on the petticoat, which had once been a tablecloth, a
+large "S.W.H." These felonious ways are in contrast
+with the usual Serb candour. One afternoon in Belgrade
+I was searching for a small street in a district which I
+had not visited before. When at last, after many
+inquiries, I came to within fifty yards of it I found a
+policeman&mdash;but it is only fair to say that the majority
+of the force consisted at this time of soldiers recently
+disbanded. When I asked him where the street might be,
+the good man thought a while and then, throwing back
+his open hand and giving up the problem in despair, said,
+"My God, I know not."</p>
+
+<p>The wave of crime has manifested itself differently
+among the Serbs and the Montenegrins, in that the latter
+have been more primitive and have consummated their
+plundering by assassination&mdash;and this in a country where
+between 1895 and 1913 only two men were murdered for
+their money. In Serbia the people, even in the terrible
+distress after the War, did not go to such lengths. During
+the first half-year, the only two cases of unnatural death
+in the whole district of &#268;a&#269;ak, where I spent a couple of
+months, were both of them suicides, an old man hanging
+himself on account of the death of his last remaining
+soldier son, and an officer's wife, who had been too friendly
+to an Austrian, throwing herself into a well on her
+husband's return. A certain village of the same district
+is an instance of the frequency of all those minor peccadilloes,
+such as drunkenness and rowdiness and so forth,
+which the Serbs permit themselves. There is a law which
+lays it down that the mayor must be a native and must
+be a man who never has been lodged in gaol. But
+that unhappy village in the &#268;a&#269;ak region is unable to
+produce a single adult man with such a record.... If
+the Serb of the old kingdom is a more easy-going individual
+than his brother of the mountains it is quite erroneous to
+think that they dislike each other or have not resolved to
+come together.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="section">THE CROATS AND THE SERBS</p>
+
+<p>Some of Yugoslavia's neighbours were anxious, during
+the months which followed the War, that we should learn
+how Serb and Croat were continually at each other's
+throat. The dissensions between the two branches of
+the Yugoslav family would have been much more serious
+and more prolonged if their neighbours had paid less
+attention to them. It is true that "our Serbian customs,"
+in the words of Ja&#353;a Tomi&#263;, "come from the village, while
+those of the Croats come from the nobles." The humbler
+Croat, one may say, was an employee in a big store, while
+the Serb was a small trader. The Croat would naturally
+like to introduce the big-store system into Yugoslavia,
+but this the Serb does not understand. He has a greater
+sense of responsibility and is more careful with regard to
+the expenses. To the Croat, in the old Empire, it was
+immaterial whether the officials were more or less costly.
+The bill was paid by Austria, who was the foe. For some
+time the Croat found himself forgetting that he was in
+Yugoslavia. When Cardinal Bourne came to Zagreb in
+the spring of 1919 and the town-hall was decorated with
+the British, Croatian, Serbian, Slovene and the town
+flag, some one asked the mayor why the State flag had
+been omitted. He was horrified. "The State flag!"
+he cried. Then it dawned upon him.... Numbers of
+Croats have belonged to the governing class and&mdash;impelled
+by the Catholic religion&mdash;have displayed more
+devotion to the arts than to the freedom of their country.
+On the other hand the Serbs, a race of practical peasants,
+have a highly developed national consciousness. This
+they owe partly to their inborn political gifts and largely
+to their Church, for the Orthodox religion&mdash;one may
+say, I think, without injustice&mdash;has more frequently
+shown itself, so closely is it connected with the idea of the
+State, to be rather of this world than of another. One
+should say the Orthodox religion as it flourishes in the
+Balkans, for when the Russian General Bobrikoff, who
+was attached to the person of King Milan, came back
+with him to Belgrade after the Peace of San Stefano, he
+was scandalized to see that religion had no greater share
+in the national rejoicings. "Accustomed as I was in my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span>
+own country," he said, "to see nothing done without
+prayers and the blessing of the Church, I was indeed
+astounded to observe that the priests played the part of
+officials even in the cathedral, and often were altogether
+absent." This reminds one of von Baernreiter, who
+wished to learn the Serbian language, so that he would
+be more eligible for the governorship of Bosnia. He
+asked his teacher at Vienna when one could hear sermons
+in the Serbian church, and was informed that these
+occurred but twice a year and that on those occasions
+everybody left the church. The Serb and the Bulgar
+have come to neglect our distinctions between that which
+is spiritual and that which is temporal; their religion is,
+in consequence of their history, so inherent a part of the
+nation's life that in losing it one would almost cease to
+be a Serb or a Bulgar. Their Church is as national as
+that of the Armenians.<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> This may not be an ideal state
+of things, but it prevailed in Spain under the Moorish
+oppression and in the France of Jeanne d'Arc. During
+the crisis of the Great War the churches in the West
+were everywhere national; and in Serbia it was calculated
+that 60 per cent. of the sermons had a pronounced national
+colouring....</p>
+
+<p>Now with these differences between the Croat and
+the Serb, does it not seem strange that the vast majority
+of them are for union, with a part of this majority in
+favour of a reasonable decentralization? But if we
+investigate the motives of the Serbs and Croats who
+would thwart this union, we will see that they have
+nothing of that faith which, after all these centuries, has
+moved the Yugoslav multitude. Some of the Serbs wish
+to keep aloof on the ground that Serbia in the last hundred
+years has borne the brunt of the battle&mdash;and this, whether
+they were or were not faced with a more difficult situation,
+is acknowledged by most of the Croats, who for that
+reason would never dream of wishing the more modern
+Zagreb to supplant Belgrade. Those few Croats who are
+not for Yugoslavia are moved by ecclesiastical prejudice
+or by their longing for the privileges which the Habsburgs
+granted them. But those who, for various reasons,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span>criticize the central Government are by no means necessarily
+in favour of setting up a separate one. Whatever the
+impetuous Radi&#263; may have said, he is out for Yugoslavia.
+Still one cannot be astonished that he was sometimes
+misunderstood. The Zagreb students who, towards the
+end of 1918, came to Svetozar Pribi&#269;evi&#263; with the request
+that he would let them kill the demagogue, were for
+expressing in this way what Dr. Du&#353;an Popovi&#263;, the well-known
+deputy, expressed in another. It was at the
+Zagreb Provincial Parliament that he exclaimed, in the
+summer of 1918, that "This idea will be victorious and
+therefore I say publicly, in the presence of the whole
+people, that I am a Croat, a Serb and a Slovene, or, if
+you prefer it, none of them but merely a Yugoslav."
+In 1914 when Stamboul&uuml;sky, the future Prime Minister of
+Bulgaria, was arrested and accused of Serbophilism, he
+declared: "I am neither Bulgar or Serb; I am a Yugoslav!" ...
+For at least a generation Zagreb will remain
+particularist, zealously preserving the differences&mdash;personal,
+social and religious&mdash;which distinguish her
+people from the dominant Serbs. The Croat officers who
+burned with shame at the Archduke's murder on Bosnian
+soil, the Croat regiments that in 1915 marched into
+Belgrade with bands playing and their colours flying, the
+Croat officials whose bread and salt came from the Habsburgs
+in administering Yugoslav countries during the
+War&mdash;all these will not forget a long, deep-rooted and
+honourable tradition. But Zagreb is now even as Munich
+was in 1866; after having been the Rome of the Yugoslav
+movement, the seat of its philosophy and the centre
+of its politics, the Croat capital has now an atmosphere
+of sad futility, for Belgrade is the beacon of the Yugoslav
+world. While comparing Zagreb with Rome one must
+add that she had also the misfortune to resemble Rome
+of the decadence&mdash;a good deal of outer polish was imparted
+by the Austrians, at the expense of their victims' backbone.
+The five centuries of Turkish domination had no
+such demoralizing influence upon the Serbs, especially
+not in the country places. In the opinion of a very close
+observer,<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> whom I quote, there is nothing that so
+thoroughly displays the dominance of Belgrade as the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span>agrarian problem. The projected reforms, which have
+been based on the principle that no one should own more
+land than he can cultivate with the aid of his family,
+would dispossess large numbers of big landowners in
+Croatia and still larger numbers of men with moderate
+holdings, whose compensation would be "determined
+hereafter." The application of these reforms has been
+delayed for various reasons, but nowhere at any time
+has it been suggested that Croatia might reject them.
+In the old kingdom of Serbia, with much the greater
+part of the land in peasant possession, it may be said
+that there is no agrarian problem.... Those enemies
+of Yugoslavia, by the way, who have hoped that the
+particularism of Croatia would be something altogether
+different from what it is, should have mingled with the
+crowd at Zagreb on the evening of Prince Alexander's
+arrival in July 1920. The Prince interrupted his dinner,
+came out on to the balcony and made a speech. "Draga
+moja bratjo Hrvati," he said&mdash;"Croatians, my dear
+brothers." Not for a thousand years had a ruler of
+Croatia addressed his people in their own tongue. One
+immense roar of delight broke, as the <i>Morning Post's</i>
+special correspondent tells us, from the assembled multitude;
+men fell on each other's necks, laughed, wept
+and kissed each other.... Such manifestations must
+not lead us to believe that all the internal problems of
+the young State are settled. Croatia (as also Slovenia)
+is jealous of her separate identity, suspicious to some
+extent of Serbia, her prestige and projects; she has no
+intention of allowing herself, after the hard fight against
+Magyarization, to be "Balkanized." But one thing was
+made clear by the Prince's visit: there can be no word or
+thought of separation.</p>
+
+
+<p style="padding-top: 1.5em">We have spoken of the disaffection prevalent among
+the Croats, and on this the world has fixed its eyes,
+because of the large number of Croat deputies who have
+hitherto declined to come to Belgrade. Nevertheless
+there is a more general and more grievous discontent in
+Yugoslavia, since, after all, the Croats' attitude is of a
+temporary character&mdash;for it is probable that after the
+next general election their peculiar upbringing will not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
+be so potent in determining their sentiments towards
+the State. More and more will they be ready to make
+common cause with Serbs and Slovenes; and their
+criticisms, which are now so negative, will be of a more
+useful kind. (They will recognize, for example, that if it
+costs 3000 dinars to open an inn in Serbia they were
+not justified in protesting when the fee in Croatia was
+raised from 5 crowns to 5 dinars.) That Yugoslavia
+gives ground for criticism no one, least of all her well-wishers,
+deny. And those who pray that she will prosper
+do so for the reason that the scattered Southern Slavs
+have for the first time now been able&mdash;most of them at
+any rate&mdash;to link their arms together; and we hope
+that with high qualities outweighing their defects the
+Southern Slavs will permanently take their place among
+the nations. But this will not be brought about unless
+those ailments which they suffer from are now confronted.
+Serbs themselves are often saying that their little Serbia
+was better than this fine new country which is thrice as
+large. She had fewer problems, she had fewer parties,
+and if people were corrupt they were so on a smaller
+scale. Traditions which are deprecatingly called Balkan,
+but which were at that time suited to a Balkan country,
+should not be allowed to spread across a country which
+is so much more than Balkan. Merit does not everywhere
+in this imperfect world advance you automatically,
+but an effort is required in Yugoslavia to resist the calls
+of friendship in appointing men to offices. The army of
+officials is too numerous; yet many of them are so badly
+paid that even if a great reformer could reduce by half
+their numbers he would be inclined to lay no hand upon
+the total sum they now enjoy. But this necessity of
+cleansing the public services is not peculiar to Yugoslavia.
+The politicians must have courage to lay heavier taxes
+on the peasants: the strange phenomenon is seen of
+peasants who assert that they are quite prepared for
+this, and on the other hand of politicians who are frightened
+lest it lose them many votes. The peasants generally
+are so prosperous that some, for instance, whom I know
+of near Kragujevac, men occupied in growing cereals,
+find that the fowls which they keep rather as a hobby
+do not have to lay them golden eggs in order to pay all<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span>
+the taxes. In that region it is usual nowadays for
+peasants not to count their bank-notes, but to weigh
+them; recently a man disposed of certain fields for his
+own weight in notes of ten dinars. The peasants are not
+only dissatisfied with the two chief parties, the Radicals
+and the Democrats, for not taxing them sufficiently&mdash;so
+that at the next general election they may give a good
+deal more support than hitherto to their own Peasants'
+party&mdash;but they complain that their interests are neglected
+although, as we have seen, the lawyers and other townsfolk
+of the Radical and Democrat parties are so anxious
+with respect to peasants' votes.</p>
+
+<p>The difficult position of the Yugoslavs&mdash;observe how
+in the last year their exchange has fallen&mdash;is due in part
+to the deplorable activities of other peoples (vast amounts
+have had to be imported for reconstruction purposes,
+Rieka has been practically unavailable as a port, and
+conditions have been such that the Yugoslavs have had
+to keep a large army mobilized), partly their position
+is due to measures ill-advised but which they were compelled
+to take (such as their system of Agrarian Reform),
+partly to political inexperience and partly to their lack
+of organizing powers. Let us hope that from now onwards
+Yugoslavia will have to arm herself less heavily
+against the slings and arrows of the world, and that she
+will be able therefore to become a more proficient swimmer
+in this sea of troubles.</p>
+
+
+<p class="section">SERB AND BULGAR</p>
+
+<p>A map of the Balkan migrations, with its curved
+lines leading almost everywhere, is a bewildering spectacle;
+but if we study the main clusters of lines we shall see
+that the people whose movements they chronicle have
+frequently preserved, in a remarkable fashion, certain
+common characteristics: thus a stream flowed from the
+south-west towards Valjevo in Serbia, and it is interesting
+to notice how the prominent men of that region, whose
+ancestors came from somewhere between Montenegro
+and the old frontiers of Serbia, have all of them certain
+characteristics&mdash;a talent for foreign languages, a subtlety
+of reasoning, originality but insufficient observation, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span>
+clever but fallacious minds. Similarly in the Bulgar
+there are qualities which even now can be ascribed to
+the Mongol blood. The Bulgar is more stolid than the
+Serb; he is less given to sympathy and on that account
+can be cruel. The Bulgar is benevolent because he is
+urged by kindliness, whereas the more impressionable
+Serb is under the influence both of sentiment, sentimentality
+and sympathy. These differences of temperament&mdash;and
+there are others, more or less distinguishable&mdash;do
+not seem to Balkan thinkers any reason why the two
+should keep apart. And a couple of months after the
+Great War, during which the Bulgars, as their best friends
+must acknowledge, were far from irreproachable in
+occupied Serbia&mdash;partly this was due to the vast number
+of new posts for which they had no suitable men&mdash;a few
+months afterwards a Bulgarian engineer was placidly
+working among the Serbs at &#268;a&#269;ak railway station,
+wearing his own uniform. And a Serbian butcher who
+emigrated to Bulgaria settled down at Ferdinand just
+before the War and has lived there unmolested up to
+this day, and that in spite of his not being very highly
+esteemed&mdash;for, as the police president told me, he had
+married a woman with more wealth than good fame;
+the president had been among her lovers.... One would
+not suppose that the contrasting public morality of the
+two countries will keep them apart. It is easy enough for
+us to argue that this morality is on a pretty low level,
+because a Bulgarian War Minister saw fit to sue, under a
+<i>nom de guerre</i>, a French armament firm which omitted to
+send him the stipulated commission; because another
+Minister, incarcerated on account of felony, could be
+liberated by the grace of Tzar Ferdinand and become
+Premier; because a Serbian Minister used to buy himself
+corner-houses, while his Bulgarian colleagues seem to own
+most of the houses in Sofia. There was a minor Serbian
+official over against whom I took my meals for about a
+month; one of his ways was to produce a pocket-knife
+and cut his bread with it. Certain other parts of his
+ritual did not appeal to me, but who knows whether I
+did not disgust him by breaking my bread with my
+fingers? And who knows what sentiments were awakened
+some years ago at the Orthodox monastery of Gromirija,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span>
+in Croatia, when a foreign guest proposed to wash himself
+in water, though by the joyous custom of that house
+there was no other liquid on the premises but wine?
+If there is in both countries, in Serbia and Bulgaria, a
+movement against the cynicism which does not clothe
+its corruption with a decent Western drapery, that is
+something; if there is a further movement in the direction
+of probity, that is something more. And, whatever
+some Serbs may tell you, it is undeniable that honesty
+has made important strides in the public life of that
+kingdom, even without having added to the Statute
+Book those rigorous proposals of the newly-formed
+Peasants' party, one of which would punish a peculating
+official with death. It is, however, apparent that this
+party has not arrived at a sense of discretion, for it wants
+to terminate the practice of allowing pensions to officials,
+so that each man is obliged to make his own provision
+for old age. Bulgaria, the younger country, has made
+a proportionate progress; there is trustworthy German
+evidence to the effect that the corrupt Radoslavoff
+Government was despised by the people, not in the hour
+of disaster but in 1916, when the Bulgarian soldiers
+changed the words of an anti-Serb song and instead of
+"Our old allies are brigands" proclaimed that "the
+Liberals are brigands." This German, Dr. Helmut von
+den Steinen, the correspondent of the <i>Nordeutsche
+Allgemeine Zeitung</i> (in which he was bound to speak
+favourably of Radoslavoff) used to deliver propaganda
+lectures in the Bulgarian language at Sofia during the
+War. He was very well acquainted with Bulgarian
+affairs and being summoned to Berlin at the end of 1917
+he made a speech<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> <i>in camera</i> to a committee of German
+savants and artists. In the course of this he lamented
+that his country had attached herself to Radoslavoff,
+who, said he, was hated and would at the next elections
+be swept away.</p>
+
+<p>As one must repeat <i>ad nauseam</i>, the gulf between
+Serb and Bulgar has not been caused by an extreme
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span>divergence of their private or their public morals, academically
+considered, but by the various incidents which in
+the eyes of each of them testified to the other's depravity.
+And at the bottom of it all was Macedonia&mdash;Macedonia
+which now, being wisely administered, will be the foundation-stone
+of Yugoslavia.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of his book, <i>Balkan Problems and European
+Peace</i>, Mr. Noel Buxton agrees that such a Yugoslav
+Federation has become a practical possibility. But his
+two alternative proposals with respect to what should
+meanwhile be the fate of Macedonia would indefinitely
+postpone that Federation. We have already dealt with
+the proposal of autonomy, put forward also by Mr.
+Leland Buxton. As for what Mr. Noel Buxton calls
+the ideal solution&mdash;"a plebiscite conducted by an impartial
+international commission over the whole of the
+historical province of Macedonia"&mdash;this is aiming no
+higher than at a perpetuation of the two distinct
+countries, Serbia and Bulgaria. We should probably
+have had more plebiscites in Europe if more Allied
+armies had been available, but the campaign of intimidation
+and every sort of ruthlessness which occurred in
+Upper Silesia and Schleswig make us look rather askance
+upon this method of registering the popular will. Mr.
+Buxton airily asks for a plebiscite over the whole of the
+historical province of Macedonia, ignoring altogether the
+special difficulty that "Macedonia" means something
+quite different to the Serb, the Bulgar and the Greek.
+He dismisses likewise the universal difficulty of plebiscites,
+which is to be just in laying down the limits of the various
+regions. But there is really no need for Mr. Buxton to
+take us on to those quagmires, since he knows, and is good
+enough to tell us, what the result of the plebiscite will be.
+"The Bulgarian sympathies," says he, "of the mass of
+the Macedonian population are apparent to every inquiring
+traveller." If Mr. Buxton were to encounter
+one of those pretty lawless Karaka&#269;an nomads, who
+from the Monastir district wander all over the Balkans,
+his recognition of the man's Roman and Thraco-Illyrian
+descent would be facilitated by the permanent cheesy
+odour which pervades his person. There is nothing so
+permanent about the Macedonian Slav. His sympathies,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span>
+as is natural, have gone out to that Balkan country which
+cultivated him and since, as Dr. Milovanovi&#263;, the Serbian
+statesman, says, "the Serbs did not begin to think about
+Macedonia till 1885," it would indeed have been extraordinary
+if the Macedonian Slavs&mdash;whose ethnical
+position, as scientists agree, is such a vague one&mdash;had
+been generally drawn to Serbia. One cannot help feeling
+that in this book Mr. Buxton does a serious disservice to
+his reputation as a Balkan expert. He says that Serbia
+until the accession of King Peter was Austrophil; which
+is, to put it mildly, a very sweeping remark&mdash;only that
+party which called itself Progressive was identified with
+Milan's views. He praises the Bulgars for being devoted
+to their national Church, and praises them for producing
+a large number of Protestants, whose sincerity, etc.,
+so that one presumes he would have praised them still
+more if the whole nation, as was once on the cards, had
+joined the Protestant Church. Save me from my
+friends! the Bulgars might say. What is perfectly
+sincere about them is their patriotism; and while some
+of those who now change their religion have doubtless
+no ulterior, personal motive, the entire country would
+probably have as little reluctance as Japan in adopting
+any religion which, like the Exarchist Church of to-day,
+would be an instrument of the national cause. Mr.
+Buxton's knowledge of the Balkan protagonists has its
+limitations; for example, prior to Bulgaria's entry into
+the War he was all for the removal of the British Minister
+on account of his pro-Serbian sympathies, but he says
+no word about M. Savinsky, the Russian Minister, who
+was left by his Entente colleagues to play the first violin.
+This capricious gentleman was no diplomat, but a courtier.
+He did not even protest when German munitions for
+Turkey passed through Roumania, and far too much of
+his time was spent in motoring with pretty girls in the
+neighbourhood of Sofia. Many good observers were of
+opinion that with a more competent Russian representative,
+such as M. Nekludoff, who in 1914 was transferred
+to Stockholm, the situation would have been
+saved. In their memorandum submitted in January
+1915 to Lord (then Sir Edward) Grey, Messrs. N. and C.&nbsp;R.
+Buxton said that their experience of fifteen years convinced<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span>
+them that the Bulgarian sentiment of the Macedonians
+could not in a short time be made to give
+way to another national sentiment. If we rule out, as
+being slaves of circumstance, all the Macedonians who
+now tell you that from Bulgar they have changed to
+Serb, there is no reason why we should not credit those
+who are so weary of the rival activities of both parties
+that they wish for peace and nothing else. They would
+follow, not the Messrs. Buxton, but the priest of the
+Bulgarian village of Chuprenia, who told me that he held
+that one might pray to God for the success of the
+Bulgarian arms, without saying whether they were in
+the right or in the wrong. After the end of the war
+this priest sent a telegram, which was perhaps a little
+indiscreet, advocating that the Bulgarian people should
+join in Yugoslavia.</p>
+
+<p>To prevent the Southern Slavs being torn by internal
+strife, it is necessary between Serbia and Bulgaria that
+one of them should for a time be paramount. We may
+be confident that Serbia will not abuse her position. In
+fact it is the opinion of a Roumanian lady at Monastir
+that the Serbs were uncommonly rash in taking into
+their service so many who once had called themselves
+Bulgars and now maintain that they are Serbs. But
+Serbia has become relatively so strong that she can be
+indulgent. She will even satisfy that Bulgarian professor
+who is said to have discussed the Macedonian
+question with the British military attach&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>The attach&eacute; suggested a division between Serbia and
+Bulgaria.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the professor; "let the country remain a
+whole, like the child before Solomon."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you be satisfied?" asked the attach&eacute;, "if this
+question were now decided once and for all?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the professor, "if the judge be another
+Solomon."</p>
+
+<p>Among the Bulgars who are looking forward to the
+day when their country will, in some form or other,
+join Yugoslavia, there are some who suggest that when
+comparative tranquillity has been assured upon the
+Macedonian frontiers (that is to say, between Macedonia
+and the Albanians) it would be as well to garrison the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span>
+province with Croatian regiments, pending the employment
+in their own country of Macedonian troops. Gradually
+the time will come when, as one of the units of the
+Yugoslav State, Macedonia will enjoy the same amount
+of Home Rule as the other provinces. She will then,
+maybe, decide for herself such matters as the <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'preservaiton'">preservation</ins>
+of her dialects, local administration, police, etc.</p>
+
+
+<p style="padding-top: 1.5em">Once on the banks of the Danube when I was going
+to sail from one of these countries to her neighbour with
+whom she had recently been at war, and some of the
+inhabitants had kindly come to see me off, I was presented,
+amongst other things, with an old gentleman's
+good wishes, which he had taken the trouble to express in
+French and in verse. I believe that he recited them,
+but there was a considerable tumult on the landing-stage.
+Then a very angry traveller appropriated one of
+my ears and began to tell me that they were for detaining
+him in this country; three or four natives of the country
+reported, simultaneously, into my other ear that he had
+been letting off his revolver and was altogether a
+dangerous man. I was to settle whether he should sail
+or not, and meanwhile his luggage had been put ashore.
+He waved his passport in my face. Both he and his
+opponents were gesticulating with great violence, and
+this they continued to do even after I filled their hands
+with most of the small and large bouquets which the
+friendly people had brought down for me. There was so
+much noise that the boat's whistle, which the captain
+started, was no more than a forest-tree soaring slightly
+over those around it. As I tried to disentangle myself
+from those who encircled me I caught sight of the old
+gentleman of the poem&mdash;in appearance he was a smaller
+edition of the late Dr. Butler of Trinity; he was clearly
+nervous lest I should depart without his lines, which he
+extended towards me, written on the back of one of his
+visiting-cards. I was just then being told by the agitated
+traveller that he had only been firing into the air because
+it was Easter, and that this was his invariable custom at
+midnight on Easter-Eve. The explanation was so satisfactory
+that everyone welcomed my suggestion that he
+should sail and that they should send his revolver on to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span>
+him by parcel post. They all shook hands with him.
+The two nationalities were on excellent terms. And we
+may transfer the old gentleman's good wishes to them
+and the other Yugoslavs:</p>
+
+<div class="poem" style="font-size: 90%"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh! la belle journ&eacute;e de votre bonheur,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Souhaitons votre bon voyage tout-&agrave;-l'heure.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Couronn&eacute; de grands succ&egrave;s du ciel je vous implore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Allegr&egrave;sse, sant&eacute; et prosperit&eacute; je vous augure.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[410]</a></span></h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> Cf. <i>Modern Italy</i>, by Giovanni Borghese. Paris, 1913.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> Cf. <i>Through the Lands of the Serb</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> Cf. <i>The Children of the Illuminator</i>, by Bishop Nicholai Velimirovi&#263;.
+London, 1919.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> <i>Edinburgh Review</i>, July 1920 (anonymous).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> Subsequently printed as a pamphlet with the title, <i>Die Ausgestaltung
+des deutschen Kultur-Einflusses in Bulgarien</i>. This was printed by the
+Opposition parties in Sofia, who to circumvent the censor gave out that
+it was written by an Englishman against Bratiano.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2><a name="INDEX_OF_VOLUME_II" id="INDEX_OF_VOLUME_II"></a>INDEX OF VOLUME II<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[411]</a></span></h2>
+
+<p class="center">(<i>The Names of</i> <ins class="correction"
+title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Books'"><i>Books,</i></ins> <i>Newspapers, and Ships are in Italics.</i>)</p>
+
+
+<ul>
+<li>Abbazia, Conditions at, <a href="#Page_72">72</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Achikou (Kol), brother of Anthony, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Achikou (Prof. Anthony), the Mirdite, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li><i>Adeverul</i>, its claims, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Agrarian Reform in Czecho-Slovakia, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; in Hungary, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; in Yugoslavia, <a href="#Page_132">132</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Ahmed Beg Mati, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>-<a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Albanais</i>, <i>Les</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Albanesische Studien</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Albanians against Austrian army, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; compared with Basques, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; &mdash; Kurds, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; of Dalmatia, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; and the land in Yugoslavia, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Albanie Independente</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Albanien und die Albanesen</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alberti (Mario), his <i>L'Adriatico et il Mediterraneo</i>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alexander (King) and the Communists, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; and the Croats, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; on the Italians, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ambassadors' Conference, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Ambris (A. di) and the British boots, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-Albanian Society, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Apponyi (Count), on Hungary's neighbours, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Asquith (H.&nbsp;H.) and Dalmatia, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Austrian activities in Albania, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>-<a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>-<a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Austrians in Montenegro, <a href="#Page_97">97</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; their hospitals, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>-<a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Austrians, their parliamentary manners, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Autonomists, the old party, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-<a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>-<a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;the Rieka party, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Avramovi&#263; of the Peasants' party, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Badoglio (General) and the coal-supply, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>-<a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Balkan Committee, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Banat, after the War, <a href="#Page_124">124</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Baro&#353;, <i>see</i><a href="#Rieka"> Rieka</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bartlett (C.&nbsp;A.&nbsp;H.) and Italy's rights, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Basri Bey, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>-<a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beaumont (A.), the correspondent, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>-<a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Belloc (H.), his curious ideas, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>-<a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Bellum Gallicum</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bencivenga (General) and the Albanians, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Benelli (Sem), poet and warrior, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berati Bey, the delegate, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berlin Congress and two villages, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Bessa Shqyptare</i>, its existence, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>-<a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bib Doda, Prenk, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>-<a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bissolati, the gallant Minister, <a href="#Page_80">80</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blakeney, for Rieka, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blood-vengeance, Monsignor Bum&ccedil;i on, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; Miss Durham on, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; how it may be washed out, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; its high-water mark, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; its prevalence, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; its relative decline, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bobrikoff (General), on religion in Serbia, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>-<a href="#Page_398">398</a>.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[412]</a></span></li>
+
+<li>Bogi&#263; (Dr.), the victim, <a href="#Page_149">149</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Bojana, perilous for French boats, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bojani&#263; (Dom Ivo), his protest, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Borghese (Prince Livio), <a href="#Page_375">375</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bosnia and Agrarian Reform, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>-<a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; after the War, <a href="#Page_106">106</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>-<a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Bosnische Post</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Boxich (Dr.), the results of truthfulness, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>-<a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brodie (Captain), his exploit, <a href="#Page_306">306</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Brunhes (Prof. Jean), cited, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bryce (Roland), his Montenegrin report, <a href="#Page_253">253</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Bufani, of the Banat, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bukvich (Captain), the Intelligence Officer, <a href="#Page_158">158</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Bulgars, some characteristics, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>-<a href="#Page_404">404</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; and the future, <a href="#Page_405">405</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Bum&ccedil;i (Monsignor), the mild Regent, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>-<a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="Buonfiglio" id="Buonfiglio"></a>Buonfiglio (R.), the journalist, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Buri&#263; (V.), <a href="#Page_193">193</a>-<a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burrows (the late Prof.) and the Albanians, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Buxton (Noel), <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his <i>Balkan Problems and European Peace</i>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Cagni (Admiral) at Pola, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>-<a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Candrea (Prof.), his map, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cappone (Colonel) of &#352;ibenik, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carducci, quoted, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="Carinthia" id="Carinthia"></a>Carinthia, hostilities, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; the plebiscite, <a href="#Page_374">374</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Cecil (Lord Robert) and the Albanians, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>-<a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&#268;ekoni&#263; (Count) and the Dobrovoljci, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Centurione, the deputy, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chauvinism, Serbian lack of, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>-<a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Chicago Tribune</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>-<a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chimig&ograve; (Prof.) and the Italians, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Church in Albania, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; in Croatia, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>-<a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; in Serbia, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>-<a href="#Page_398">398</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cicoli (Admiral) and Austria's collapse, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>-<a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clemenceau (G.), <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&#268;okorilo and his undesirable newspaper, <a href="#Page_109">109</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Colajanni and the Slovenes, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Communists in Yugoslavia, <a href="#Page_221">221</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Contemporary Review</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>-<a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Corriere d'Italia</i> (and <i>see</i> <a href="#Buonfiglio">Buonfiglio</a>), <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Costume, Absence of, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>-<a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cres, Italian measures at, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li><a name="Croats" id="Croats"></a>Croats and Agrarian Reform, <a href="#Page_133">133</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; and Magyars, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; their relations to the Serbs, <a href="#Page_111">111</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>-<a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Crosse (Rev. E.&nbsp;C.), his <i>The Defeat of Austria</i>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cunnington (Captain Willett), his accusation, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cviji&#263; (Prof.), his views, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li><i>Daily Telegraph</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="Dalmatia" id="Dalmatia"></a>Dalmatia, why demanded by Italians, <a href="#Page_87">87</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; deportations from, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; population, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>-<a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>-<a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; how treated by Italians, <a href="#Page_148">148</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li><i>Dalmazia</i>, a newspaper, <a href="#Page_171">171</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li><a name="DAnnunzio" id="DAnnunzio"></a>D'Annunzio, his absurdity, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; the Holy Entry, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; various exploits at Rieka, <a href="#Page_208">208</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his invective, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his munificence, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>-<a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; in temporary possession, <a href="#Page_198">198</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his thousand proclamations, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; disapproves of Treaty of Rapallo, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>-<a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Darkovi&#263;, the respected deputy, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Davidovi&#263;, leader of Democrats, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dell (Anthony) on the Italians, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Delonga (Jakov), his testimony, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Devine (A.) and his propaganda, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>-<a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>-<a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Djakovica, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Djer Doucha, the villain, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Djoni (Mark), President of the Mirditi, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Doci (Primo), the great Abbot, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span></li>
+
+<li>Doday (Father Paul), <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Doimi (Dr.) of Vis, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Domiaku&#353;i&#263; (Prof.) at &#352;ibenik, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Donghi (Marchese), his assertions, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>-<a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Draghicesco (Dr.), his <i>Les Roumains de Serbie</i>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dra&#353;kovi&#263;, his murder, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>-<a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Drin, river, as a frontier, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Durham (Edith), apologist, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; compared with Sir Charles Eliot, <a href="#Page_310">310</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; disgusted with Great Britain, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; her <i>Through the Lands of the Serb</i>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; her <i>Twenty Years of Balkan Tangle</i>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; her respect for Mr. Bottomley, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; her wrath, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; on Albanian medicine, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; on the tyranny of Serbian schools, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li><i>Echo de l'Adriatique</i>, its suppression, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>-<a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Edinburgh Review</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Edinost</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eliot (Sir Charles), <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Entente, Little, <a href="#Page_269">269</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li><i>Epopea Shqyptare</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Essad and Essadists, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>-<a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>-<a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
+
+<li>European War and the Albanians, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>-<a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>-<a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Evangheli (Pandeli), <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Evans (Sir Arthur), <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a> <i>et seq.<br /><br /></i></li>
+
+
+<li>Fan Noli, the versatile, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>-<a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fascisti, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Fichta (Father), <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fisher (Rt. Hon. H.&nbsp;A.&nbsp;L.), <a href="#Page_340">340</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Fiume, <i>see</i> <a href="#Rieka">Rieka</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fodor (Prof. Dr.), on race, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Fortnightly Review</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Franchet d'Esp&eacute;rey (Marshal) and Albania, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>-<a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; &mdash; and Montenegro, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Frank party in Croatia, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
+
+<li>French, how they regarded the Italians, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>-<a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; how treated by the Italians, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>-<a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Freund (Leo), the secret agent, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Frontier, Yugoslav, with Albania, <a href="#Page_273">273</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; with Austria, <a href="#Page_374">374</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; with Bulgaria, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>-<a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; with Greece, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>-<a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; with Hungary, <a href="#Page_370">370</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; with Italy, <a href="#Page_383">383</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; with Roumania, <a href="#Page_356">356</a> <i>et seq.<br /><br /></i></li>
+
+
+<li>Gaeta army, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gardner (E.), on Balkanic mentality, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gauvain, the publicist, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gavazzi (Dr. A.), on Rieka's population, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Gazzetta del Popolo</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li>"G&eacute;ographie Humaine de la France," quoted, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Germans, in Banat, <a href="#Page_363">363</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; in Carinthia, <a href="#Page_374">374</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Giglioli (Prof.), his claim, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Giolitti, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Giuratti, the patriot, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>-<a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Glasgow Herald</i>, on Treaty of Rapallo, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gloma&#382;i&#263;, the lame prefect, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Goad (H.&nbsp;E.), his explanations, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his wrath, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Godart (Justin), his work in Albania, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his <i>L'Albanie en 1921</i>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gorica, its population, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>-<a href="#Page_389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gothardi of Rieka, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>-<a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Grazer Tagblatt</i>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grazioli (General) at Rieka, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grossich (Dr.) of Rieka, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>-<a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grubi&#353;i&#263; and his flag, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gusinje, its past and future, <a href="#Page_304">304</a> <i>et seq.</i><br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Hahn (Consul), his labours, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Halim Beg Derala, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hanotaux (Gabriel), <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Haumant (E.), his <i>La Slavisation de la Dalmatie</i>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Herbert (Hon. Aubrey, M.P.), <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; on Montenegro, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his propaganda, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span></li>
+
+<li>Herbert (Hon. Aubrey, M.P.), his request, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his testimony, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; the 120 villages, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hickmann (Prof.), cited, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Histoire illustr&eacute;e de la guerre de 1914</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hla&#263;a (Karlo) of Cres, <a href="#Page_56">56</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Horthy (Admiral) at Pola, <a href="#Page_17">17</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Hrvat</i>, on the Carinthian plebiscite, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>-<a href="#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Humanit&eacute;</i>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Hungarian Nation</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="Hvar" id="Hvar"></a>Hvar, its interesting names, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>-<a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; the Italians land on, <a href="#Page_32">32</a> <i>et seq.</i><br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Imperiali (Marquis), his submission, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Islamism, Fanatic, of some Albanians, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; Superficial, of other, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; Treatment of, by Greek Church, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; Treatment of, by Montenegrins, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Islands of Adriatic, demanded by Italy, <a href="#Page_166">166</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; &mdash; visited, <a href="#Page_165">165</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Istria, its population, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Italianists of Dalmatia and Rieka, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Italians (and <i>see</i> <a href="#Dalmatia">Dalmatia</a>) and Allied flags, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; reprimanded by their Allies, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>-<a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; loyalty to Austria in the War, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; system of bribery, <a href="#Page_156">156</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; land in Dalmatia, <a href="#Page_29">29</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; discouragement in 1917, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; conduct towards the French, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>-<a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; what they thought of the French, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; generosity in Albania, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; Good and bad, on the islands, <a href="#Page_168">168</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; incapacity, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; intrigues, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>-<a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Italians land in Istria, <a href="#Page_42">42</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; and the Dalmatians' money, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>-<a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>-<a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>-<a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; in Montenegro, <a href="#Page_94">94</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>-<a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; naval enterprise, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>-<a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; naval enterprise, lack of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-<a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; measures at Rab, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; measures against Rieka, <a href="#Page_262">262</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; measures at Rieka, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; against the Serbo-Croat language, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; retreat from Slovenia, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; what they had to face in 1918, <a href="#Page_12">12</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; how they regard the Yugoslavs, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; how they are regarded by the Yugoslavs, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>-<a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-<a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>-<a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; relations with Yugoslavs, <a href="#Page_383">383</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; steps against Yugoslav churches and schools, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-<a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>-<a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Italy in the Balkans at this Hour</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Jaray (Gabriel Louis), <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Jire&#269;ek (Dr. C.), his <i>Die Handelsstrassen, etc.</i>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Journal des D&eacute;bats</i>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Kadri (Hodja), <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Karl (ex-Emperor), his grand offer, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kar&oacute;lyi (Count Michael), <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Katarani (Prof.), <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Klementi, <a href="#Page_316">316</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Koch (Admiral), the active Slovene, <a href="#Page_17">17</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Korac, the remarkable Socialist, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>-<a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kor&#269;ula, Italians land on, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>-<a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Koro&#353;ec (Monsignor), <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Koroski Slovenec</i>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>"Kossovo" Committee, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kossovo in Yugoslavia, its condition, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kova&#263;s (A.), turns to the Croats, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="Krk" id="Krk"></a>Krk, the persecuted Bishop, <a href="#Page_40">40</a> <i>et seq.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span></li>
+<li>&mdash; Proceedings at, <a href="#Page_39">39</a> <i>et seq.</i><br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li><i>Labour Monthly</i> on the "White Terror," <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Land and Water</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Language of Bosnia, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Laveleye (M. de), his <i>The Balkan Peninsula</i>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Lavoratore</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lazari, his question, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
+
+<li>League of Nations, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Leiper (R.), the shrewd observer, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>-<a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lenac (Dr.) of Rieka, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Leonidas</i>, the American ship, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>-<a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lesina, <i>see</i> <a href="#Hvar">Hvar</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leyland (John), the naval authority, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="Liga" id="Liga"></a>Liga Nazionale, its schools, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lin, a village, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, quoted, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lissa, <i>see</i> <a href="#Vis">Vis</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ljocha (Alush) and his house, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>-<a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lloyd George (D.) and the Adriatic, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>-<a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; and the Serbo-Albanian frontier, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Lovrana, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>-<a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Luzzatti, compares two civilizations, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Macchiedo (Dr.), liberated from Sardinia, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Macdonald (J.&nbsp;N.), his <i>A Political Escapade</i>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Macedonia, and the Communists, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>-<a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; its progress and future, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Magnanimity of the Serbs, <a href="#Page_124">124</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Magyar hopes, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mahni&#263; (Bishop), <i>see</i> <a href="#Krk">Krk</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Manchester Guardian</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mandirazza (F.) and his two masters, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Markovi&#263; (Dr. Lazar), <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Markovi&#263; (Sima), the Communist, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>-<a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Martini&#263; (Count), his ruthlessness, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>-<a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Martinovi&#263; (General), <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Massingham (H.&nbsp;W.), <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Mattino</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maximovi&#263; (Colonel) at Rieka, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>-<a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mazzini, and Vis, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Mercure de France</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mileti&#263; (Captain), his murder, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Millo (Admiral), on Austrian currency, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; on Dr. Boxich, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; and d'Annunzio, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; Homage to, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; discourses on public order, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; on the Slavs, <a href="#Page_141">141</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Milovanovi&#263; (Dr.), on Macedonia, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Minorities in Yugoslavia, <a href="#Page_201">201</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Mirditi, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>M'Neill (Ronald, M.P.), champion of Montenegro, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Montaigne, quoted, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montenegrins and Albanians, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; and the Austrian army, <a href="#Page_98">98</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; their culture, <a href="#Page_393">393</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; their General Election, <a href="#Page_253">253</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; as migrants, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; misled, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>-<a href="#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montesquieu, quoted, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Moretti (Dr.), his pacific efforts, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>-<a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Morning Post</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>-<a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Moslems in Bosnia, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>-<a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>-<a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mousset (Albert), <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
+
+<li>M&uuml;ller (Dr. Max) and Albanian affairs, <a href="#Page_276">276</a> <i>et seq.</i><br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Narodna Uprava, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Nation</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Nazione</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Near East</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>-<a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Neue Freie Presse</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>New Europe</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>-<a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>New Statesman</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nicholas of Montenegro, his lack of courage, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; deposed, <a href="#Page_100">100</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his downfall, <a href="#Page_255">255</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Nicholas of Montenegro, his methods with Albanians, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his methods with Europe, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; and the Skup&#353;tina, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nikai (Dom Ndoc), <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Nineteenth Century and After</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nitti and d'Annunzio, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>-<a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>-<a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nopsca (Baron), <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Novi Bazar, Sandjak, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>-<a href="#Page_317">317</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Obradovi&#263; (Dositej), <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Obrovac, Divergent views concerning, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Observer</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Obzor</i>, a newspaper, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orlando, the Premier, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Pact of Rome, <a href="#Page_84">84</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Paolucci (Lieut.), and the <i>Viribus Unitis</i>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Parkington (Sir R.), <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Parties, Political, in Yugoslavia, <a href="#Page_117">117</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Pa&#353;i&#263;, his astuteness, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; his prudence, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Patcho&ugrave; (Dr.), of the triumvirate, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Paveli&#263; (Dr. A.), dentist and politician, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pe&#263;, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pelagosa, its amenities, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pericone (Captain) of Scutari, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pistuli (Notz), his mission, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pivko (Prof.), his exploit, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Plamenac (J.) and the Gaeta army <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his unpopularity, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Plav, <a href="#Page_304">304</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Podgorica Skup&#353;tina, <a href="#Page_100">100</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Poggi (Lieut.), at Kor&#269;ula, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pojar (Dr.), his case, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pola, <a href="#Page_16">16</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>-<a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pombara (Captain Binnos de), his feat, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-<a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pommerol (Captain), on the islands, <a href="#Page_165">165</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Popovi&#263; (Dr. Du&#353;an), <a href="#Page_246">246</a>-<a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Popovitch (Dr. A.), his curious
+career, <a href="#Page_356">356</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li><i>Posta e Shqypnis</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Pravda</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Pravi Dalmatinac</i>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Prekomurdje, what happened there, <a href="#Page_372">372</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Pr&ecirc;nnushi (Father Vincent), <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Prezzolini (G.), on Dalmatia and Tripoli, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; and Vis, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pribi&#269;evi&#263; (Svetozar), the Minister, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>-<a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>-<a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-<a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Primorske Novine</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pri&#353;tina, Horrid conditions at, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Proti&#263;, the statesman, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>-<a href="#Page_226">226</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li><i>Quarterly Review</i>, on Yugoslavia, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Race before religion, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>-<a href="#Page_391">391</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ra&#269;i&#263; (Pouni&#353;a), <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Radi&#263; (S.) of Croatia, <a href="#Page_111">111</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his <i>Dom</i>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>-<a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rado&#353;evi&#263; (Dr.), <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Radovi&#263; (Andrija), <a href="#Page_187">187</a>-<a href="#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Raineri (Admiral), <a href="#Page_49">49</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li><a name="Rapallo" id="Rapallo"></a>Rapallo, Treaty of, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rapp, his testimonial, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Rassegna Italiana</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Re-Bartlett (Mrs.), on Dalmatia, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>-<a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Red Cross, American, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; International, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; Italian, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Regnault (E.), his <i>Histoire politique, etc.</i>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Religion before race, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="Rieka" id="Rieka"></a>Rieka, <i>see</i> <a href="#DAnnunzio">D'Annunzio</a> and <a href="#Vio">Vio</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; Americans at, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; the Austrian stores, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; Baro&#353; harbour, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; the C.N.I., <a href="#Page_45">45</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>-<a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; Croat mistakes, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>-<a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; Croat National Council, <a href="#Page_45">45</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>-<a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; economic position, <a href="#Page_66">66</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; the frenzy, <a href="#Page_137">137</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; moribund under Italy, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; population analysed, <a href="#Page_53">53</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; a few scandals, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Rieka and the Treaty of Rapallo, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>-<a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a> <i>et seq.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span></li>
+
+<li><i>Rije&#263;</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Risti&#263; (Colonel) and the komitadjis, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>-<a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rossetti (Major) and the <i>Viribus Unitis</i>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Roth (Dr.), Lord of Teme&#353;var, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>-<a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roumanians in Banat, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; and their Jews, <a href="#Page_203">203</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; in Serbia, <a href="#Page_356">356</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Rugovo, Reason for burning of, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ryan (T.&nbsp;S.) of the <i>Chicago Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>-<a href="#Page_199">199</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Salis (Count de), his mission, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>-<a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Salonica, and the Serbs, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>-<a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Salvemini (Prof.), the anti-chauvinist, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>-<a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Salvi (Dr.) of Split, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li><i>Samouprava</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
+
+<li>San Marzano (General di), <a href="#Page_51">51</a>-<a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sanctis (Lieut. de), his sanctions, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saseno, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Saturday Review</i>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Savinsky, the Russian Minister, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sazonov, and the Adriatic, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>-<a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Schanzer (Signor), on Rieka, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>-<a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Schools, <i>see</i> <a href="#Liga">Liga Nazionale</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; for Albanians, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; in Carinthia, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>-<a href="#Page_378">378</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; at Cres, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>-<a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; in Dalmatia, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-<a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; in Istria, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>-<a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; at Kor&#269;ula, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; Militant, at Borgo Erizzo, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; in Montenegro, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; at Pola, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; at Rieka, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; at &#352;ibenik, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>-<a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; at Zadar, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Scotsman</i>, on Treaty of Rapallo, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scutari, its probable future, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sebenico, <i>see</i> <a href="#sibenik">&#352;ibenik</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Secolo</i>, on Montenegro, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; on Treaty of London, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Secours des Enfants Serbes</i>, <i>Au</i>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Segr&eacute; (General), his alleged request, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Sera</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Serbo-Croat Coalition, <a href="#Page_245">245</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Serbs, in relation to Albanians, <a href="#Page_295">295</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; &mdash; Croats (and <i>see</i> <a href="#Croats">Croats</a>), <a href="#Page_115">115</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; &mdash; Montenegrins, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>-<a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>-<a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Sereggi (Archbishop), <a href="#Page_281">281</a>-<a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Seton-Watson (Dr. R.&nbsp;W.), <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sforza (Count), his letter, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="sibenik" id="sibenik"></a>&#352;ibenik, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>-<a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Siebertz, the traveller, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&#352;imunovi&#263; (M.) and the Italians, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Slovenes (<i>see</i> <a href="#Carinthia">Carinthia</a>), their country, <a href="#Page_120">120</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>-<a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; their culture, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>-<a href="#Page_393">393</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; their political methods, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Socialists, Italian, and Rieka, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>-<a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&#352;ojat (F.) and Dr. Vio, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sonnino (Baron), <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Spectator</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sportiello (Captain) at Vis, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stadler (Lieut.-Colonel), the podest&agrave;, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stamboul&uuml;sky as a Yugoslav, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stamps, at Zagreb, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Star&#269;evi&#263; party in Croatia, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Steed (H. Wickham), his letter, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Steinen (Dr. H. von den) and the Bulgars, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Steinmetz, the traveller, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&#352;tigli&#263; and the poor officials, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Strossmayer, Radi&#263; on, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Suisse</i>, <i>La</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Supilo, of Dalmatia, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Su&#353;ak, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>-<a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Susmel (Edoardo), the writer, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&#352;vegel (Ivan), on Italian shipping policy, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>-<a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Svibi&#263; (Colonel) and the Italians, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sydenham (Lord), his lack of discretion, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>-<a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Szeged, its position, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li><i>Tablet</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tamaro (Dr. A.) and <i>Modern Italy</i>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tardieu, his suggestion concerning Rieka, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Taylor (A.&nbsp;H.&nbsp;E.), on Prekomurdje, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span></li>
+
+<li>Teme&#353;var in transition, <a href="#Page_126">126</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Temperley (Major H.&nbsp;W.&nbsp;V.), on Albania, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>-<a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; on Montenegro, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>-<a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his <i>A History of the Peace Conference</i>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; his <i>The Second Year of the League</i>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Tempo</i>, on the Rieka deputations, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Temps</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tesli&#263; (Colonel), <a href="#Page_50">50</a>-<a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Times</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>-<a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tittoni, and Rieka, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tomi&#263; (Ja&#353;a), the old-fashioned, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Treaty of London, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>-<a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a> <i>et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; &mdash; Rapallo, <i>see</i> <a href="#Rapallo">Rapallo</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tre&#353;i&#263;-Pavi&#269;i&#263; (Dr. A.), <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trevelyan (G.&nbsp;M.), on the Italians in Dalmatia, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Tribuna</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Tribune de Gen&egrave;ve</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Triest, what is desirable, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; its future, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; Italians and Slovenes, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; its population, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trogir, the great invasion, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>-<a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trumbi&#263; (Dr. A.), <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Turkey in Europe</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li><i>Under the Acroceraunian Mountains</i>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Unit&agrave;</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Veglia, <i>see</i> <a href="#Krk">Krk</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Velika Kikinda, its necessities, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Velimirovi&#263; (Bishop), his <i>The Children of the Illuminator</i>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Venizelos and the Serbs, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>-<a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; and Thrace, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Veprinac, its population, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Verdinois (Major), his word, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Verrath bei Carzano</i>, <i>Der</i>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ver&#353;ac, the former Bishop's declaration, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ver&#353;ac, scene of Roumanian activities, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vesni&#263; (Dr.) and the Italians, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>-<a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ve&#353;ovi&#263; (General), his enterprises, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>-<a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="Vio" id="Vio"></a>Vio (Dr.) of Rieka, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>-<a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>-<a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li><a name="Vis" id="Vis"></a>Vis, Italians land on, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; concerning its possession, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>-<a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vivante (A.), his <i>L'irredentismo adriatico</i>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vivian (H.), his ferocity, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Volosca, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>-<a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Vorstoss in die Nordalbanischen Alpen</i>, quoted, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vukoti&#263; (Voivoda), his answer, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vukovi&#263; (Admiral), his fate, <a href="#Page_20">20</a> <i>et seq.</i><br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Westlake (Prof.), his <i>International Law</i>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wied (Prince of), erstwhile Mpret, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>-<a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; (Princess of), her ladies criticized, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wilson (President), <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>-<a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>-<a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>-<a href="#Page_214">214</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Xenia (Princess), <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li>Yastrebow, the Russian authority, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Yugoslavia, conditions after the War, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; her cohesion, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; and the future, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>-<a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>-<a href="#Page_399">399</a>.<br /><br /></li>
+
+
+<li><a name="Zadar" id="Zadar"></a>Zadar, reception of Italians, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; Schools at, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; and Treaty of Rapallo, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>-<a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
+<li>&mdash; Wild doings at, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>-<a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Zagreb and the future, <a href="#Page_398">398</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash; and the stamps, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Zagreber Tagblatt</i>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>-<a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Zanella (Prof.), <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Zara, <i>see</i> <a href="#Zadar">Zadar</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Zari&#263; (Bishop), and Wilson, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>-<a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Zari&#263; (Prof.), his removal, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Zena Beg, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>-<a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ziliotto (Dr.) of Zara, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>-<a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>-<a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+<p class="center" style="font-size: 80%; padding-top: 1em; font-weight: bold">PRINTED BY MORRISON AND GIBB LIMITED, EDINBURGH</p>
+
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a href="images/map-whole2.jpg"><img src="images/map-whole2_th.jpg"
+alt="Map of Yugoslavia" title="Map of Yugoslavia" /></a><a name="map" id="map"></a></p>
+
+<div class="note">
+
+<p>Please hover your mouse over the words with a thin dotted red line
+underneath them for seeing <ins class="correction"
+title="like this">what the original reads</ins>, or a transliteration
+of a Greek word.</p>
+
+<p>Obvious printer's errors have been fixed. See below for the more
+detailed list.</p>
+
+<p>The formatting of the project has been reproduced as true to the
+original images as possible.</p>
+
+<h3>Fixed issues</h3>
+
+<ul><li>page <a href="#Page_7">007</a>&mdash;inserted a missing apostrophe after 'Italians'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_9">009</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'weapoms' to 'weapons'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_14">014</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'as' to 'a'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_48">048</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'thay' to 'they'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_54">054</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'hold' to 'held'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_77">077</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'Corriera' to 'Corriere'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_94">094</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed a comma to a period after 'repression'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_94">094</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed a period to a comma after 'lend their men'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_146">146</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'aproached' to 'approached'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_147">147</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'permittep' to 'permitted'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_172">172</a>&mdash;removed an extra opening bracket in front of 'There are places'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_181">181</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'If was' to 'It was'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_189">189</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'Montengrins' to 'Montenegrins'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_196">196</a>&mdash;removed an extra opening bracket in front of 'As for large'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_197">197</a>&mdash;removed an extra closing bracket after '100 lire'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_209">209</a>&mdash;typo fixed: inserted a missing period after 'per cent'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_222">222</a>&mdash;typo fixed: 'YUGLOSLAVIA' changed to 'YUGOSLAVIA'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_317">317</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'irode' to 'rode'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_343">343</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'Yulgosav' to 'Yugoslav'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_371">371</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'persumably' to 'presumably'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_377">377</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed a comma to a period after 'less regarded'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_408">408</a>&mdash;typo fixed: changed 'preservaiton' to 'preservation'</li>
+<li>page <a href="#Page_411">411</a>&mdash;inserted a missing comma after 'Books'</li></ul>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Birth of Yugoslavia, Volume 2, by
+Henry Baerlein
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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