
The essay opens with a reflective narrator who acknowledges the difficulty of doing justice to Giuseppe Garibaldi’s towering legacy. It weaves his personal journey with the tumultuous half‑century of Italian history that shaped, and was shaped by, his relentless drive for a united nation. Early chapters trace how Garibaldi balanced the seemingly contradictory ideals of popular sovereignty and a constitutional monarchy, branding his banner “Italia e Vittorio Emanuele” while still dreaming of a republican future.
Beyond battlefield exploits, the work delves into Garibaldi’s deep concern for ordinary people—the laborers, peasants, and even the condemned brigands whose plight he saw as a social crisis, not merely a criminal one. His compassion for the working class and his belief that lasting peace required a synthesis of democratic spirit with responsible leadership are examined with nuance. Listeners will come away with a portrait of a man whose moral compass pointed toward humanity as much as toward nation‑building.
Language
it
Duration
~46 minutes (44K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2011-04-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1818–1901
A central and controversial figure in the making of modern Italy, he rose from revolutionary politics to become prime minister and a driving force in national affairs. His life spans the hopes, conflicts, and ambitions of the Risorgimento and the young Italian state.
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