[87] Cf. Dokumenti o postanku Kraljevine Srba, Hrvata i Slovenaca, 1914-1919, by Ferdo Šišić. Zagreb, 1920.
[88] Cf. International Law, Part I. p. 321.
[89] Italy and the Yugoslavs: A Question of International Law. Paris, 1919.
[90] July 17, 1920.
[91] I think that, in so far as concerns this article in the New Europe (July 8, 1920), it is fairer to describe Mr. Trevelyan as an Italian exponent rather than apologist. Although we cannot agree with various remarks of his, he makes it clear that he is out of sympathy with the Italian extremists. He deprecates also the views of those English publicists who are altogether on the side of the Yugoslavs. "The truth, perhaps," says he, "lies somewhere hid in the centre." And if that is not a very happy observation, it is at any rate much more moderate than the average views of those English writers whose spiritual home is in Italy.
[92] Byron, Childe Harold.
[93] About 36,000 boys—partly recruits and partly boys of more tender years—started over the mountains, and some 20,000 of them perished.
[94] This officer, aided by others, was charged with having organized an attempt to overthrow the Yugoslav National Council soon after its constitution in the autumn of 1918. The day of the counter-revolution was to be November 25, according to the Hrvatska Riječ of November 23. The General and others were arrested, but as he was able to prove his innocence he was liberated.
[95] With Serbia into Exile. New York, 1916.
[96] Cf. The Question, by Isidora Sekulić.