"It is fine to march with a band," he went on. "The State will help to educate you and will send you to a seaside camp in summer."
"A poor boy like me?" Tony's eyes were wide.
The other smiled. "Have you never heard how the Balilla started?" he asked.
Then he told Tony about another poor boy who had lived in Genoa years ago. When the Austrians attacked his city, he threw a stone and started an uprising. The enemy was driven away.
"That boy's name was 'Balilla,'" explained Young Italy. "Before he threw the stone, he went forward with the words, 'Shall I begin?'"
Tony's face shone with pleasure.
"Shall I begin? Shall I begin?" he muttered to himself. Why not? It would be glorious to march through the parks, waving banners. He would study hard and learn to be a soldier.
But then, Tony thought of the training and discipline. He did not want to be trained. He wanted to run wild and beg money of foreigners.
And what of Tina? There would be no place for a little dog in a military group of boys.