must, she insists, possess 
henceforward a strong and easily defended northern frontier. She is 
tired of crouching in the valleys while her enemies dominate her from 
the mountain-tops. Nor do I blame her. Her whole history is punctuated 
by raids and invasions launched from these northern heights. But the 
new frontier, in the words of former Premier Orlando, "can be defended 
by a handful of men, while therefore the defense of the Trentino salient 
required half the Italian forces, the other half being constantly 
threatened with envelopment." 
As I have already pointed out, the annexation of the Upper Adige 
means the passing of 180,000 German-speaking Austrians under Italian 
sovereignty, including the cities of Botzen and Meran; the ancient 
centers of German-Alpine culture, Brixen and Sterzing; of Schloss 
Tyrol, which gives the whole country its name; and, above all, of the 
Parsier valley, the home of Andreas Hofer, whose life and living 
memory provide the same inspiration for the Germans of Tyrol that the 
exploits and traditions of Garibaldi do for the Italians. 
That Italy is not insensible to the perils of bringing within her borders a 
bloc of people who are not and never will be Italian, is clearly shown 
by the following extract from an Italian official publication: 
"In claiming the Upper Adige, Italy does not forget that the highest 
valleys are inhabited by 180,000 Germans, a residuum from the
immigration in the Middle Ages. It is not a problem to be taken 
light-heartedly, but it is impossible for Italy to limit herself only to the 
Trentino, as that would not give her a satisfactory military frontier. 
From that point of view, the basin of Bolzano (Bozen) is as strictly 
necessary to Italy as the Rhine is to France." 
No one has been more zealous in the cause of Italy than I have been; no 
one has been more whole-heartedly with the Italians in their splendid 
efforts to recover the lands to which they are justly entitled; no one 
more thoroughly realizes the agonies of apprehension which Italy has 
suffered from the insecurity of her northern borders, or has been more 
keenly alive to the grim but silent struggle which has been waged 
between her statesmen and her soldiers as to whether the broad 
statesmanship which aims at international good-feeling and abstract 
justice, or the narrower and more selfish policy dictated by military 
necessity, should govern the delimitation of her new frontiers. But, 
because I am a friend of Italy, and because I wish her well, I view with 
grave misgivings the wisdom of thus creating, within her own borders, 
a new terra irredenta; I question the quality of statesmanship which 
insists on including within the Italian body politic an alien and 
irreconcilable minority which will probably always be a latent source 
of trouble, one which may, as the result of some unforseen irritation, 
break into an open sore. It would seem to me that Italy, in annexing the 
Upper Adige, is storing up for herself precisely the same troubles 
which Austria did when she held against their will the Italians of the 
Trentino, or as Germany did when, in order to give herself a strategic 
frontier, she annexed Alsace and Lorraine. When Italy puts forward the 
argument that she must hold everything up to the Brenner because of 
her fear of invasion by the puny and bankrupt little state which is all 
that is left of the Austrian Empire, she is but weakening her case. Her 
soundest excuse for the annexation of this region lies in her fear that a 
reconstituted and revengeful Germany might some day use the Tyrol as 
a gateway through which to launch new armies of invasion and 
conquest. But, no matter what her friends may think of the wisdom or 
justice of Italy's course, her annexation of the Upper Adige is a fait 
accompli which is not likely to be undone. Whether it will prove an act 
of wisdom or of shortsightedness only the future can tell.
The transition from the Italian Trentino to the German Tyrol begins a 
few miles south of Bozen. Perhaps "occurs" would be a more 
descriptive word, for the change from the Latin to the Teutonic, instead 
of being gradual, as one would expect, is almost startling in its 
abruptness. In the space of a single mile or so the language of the 
inhabitants changes from the liquid accents of the Latin to the 
deep-throated gutturals of the German; the road signs and those on the 
shops are now printed in quaint German script; via becomes weg, 
strada becomes strasse, instead of responding to your salutation with a 
smiling "Bon giorno" the peasants give you a solemn "Guten morgen." 
Even the architecture changes, the slender, four-square campaniles 
surmounted by bulging Byzantine domes, so characteristic of the 
Trentino, giving place to    
    
		
	
	
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