[ [214] In his address to the representatives of organized labor in January, 1918.

[ [215] L'Echo de Paris, April 29, 1919.

[ [216] Le Gaulois, April 29, 1919.

[ [217] These meetings were held from March 28 till April 23, 1919.

[ [218] See Marco Borsa's article in Il Secolo, June 18, 1919; also Corriere della Sera, June 19, 1919.

[ [219] From May 5 to 16, 1919.

[ [220] Il Secolo, June 19, 1919.

[ [221] On April 23, 1919.

[ [222] "Can and will our allies treat our absence as a matter of no moment? Can and will they violate the formal undertaking which forbids the belligerents to conclude a diplomatic peace?... The London Declaration prohibits categorically the conclusion of any separate peace with any enemy state. France and England cannot sign peace with Germany if Italy does not sign it.... The situation is grave and abnormal, for our allies it is also grave and abnormal. Italy is isolated, and nations, especially those of continental Europe, which are not overrich, flee solitude as nature abhors a vacuum."—Corriere della Sera, April 26, 1919. Again: "'The Treaty of London' restrains France and England from concluding peace without Italy. And Italy is minded not to conclude peace with Germany before she herself has received satisfaction."—Journal de Genève, April 25, 1919.

[ [223] On May 6, 1919, at Versailles.