{"id":3754,"date":"1974-02-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1974-02-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-55-no-2-february-1974-something-about-loyalty\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:31:31","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:31:31","slug":"vol-55-no-2-february-1974-something-about-loyalty","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-55-no-2-february-1974-something-about-loyalty\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 55, No. 2 &#8211; February 1974 &#8211; Something About Loyalty"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Loyalty is the noblest word in                     the catalogue of social virtue. So wrote John Ruskin in The                     Seven Lamps of Architecture, a book that is as appropriate                     a guide to building a life as to building a cathedral.<\/p>\n<p> Loyalty represents something vital, a concept, a way of                     life. Everyone has a desire, an instinct, to be loyal. The                     man or woman who has nothing to be loyal to is an unhappy                     person.<\/p>\n<p>The simplest form of loyalty may be summarized like this:                     &#8220;Here is my appointed station: this is my group. I must work                     in and with it: if need be I must fight for it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Education, travel, television, radio and reading broaden                     our horizons, and in our enlarged contact with people we find                     loyalty becoming a complex matter.<\/p>\n<p>Anyone seeking to think seriously about loyalty should understand                     that loyalty is not a decorative grace note added to the score                     of life. Handel permitted singers to employ grace notes in                     the arias of his oratorios, but he insisted that they should                     not be mere embellishments serving simply for outward display.                     They must possess musical meaning and value.<\/p>\n<p>Loyalty is intelligent devotion to an idea, a cause, a person,                     or a government. It is symbolized in the vow of the marriage                     ceremony: &#8220;For better, for worse, for richer, for poorer,                     in sickness and in health.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The loyalty of friendship is a precious quality. It means                     that one does not fade out of the picture when troubles assail                     one&#8217;s friend. It includes sympathy, mutual aid and a warm                     appreciation of personality. There is little virtue in loyalty                     if it is to be dispensed with at the first sign of any flaw                     in the human or institutional object of that loyalty.<\/p>\n<p>To be loyal is to be involved, to be a participant, to belong.                     It confirms one&#8217;s personal significance. Even in a primitive                     kraal a savage knows that he is a member of a community and                     is obliged to be loyal to it.<\/p>\n<p>On the other hand, the responsibility of those in whom loyalty                     is placed cannot be over-emphasized, and the greater the loyalty                     the greater the responsibility.<\/p>\n<p>People and institutions must <em>deserve <\/em>loyalty; they                     cannot hope to win and retain it unless they themselves are                     loyal. We say that children should be loyal to their parents:                     it is equally necessary that parents be loyal to their children.                     We expect loyalty of employees to their firms: it is equally                     obligatory that the firms be loyal to them. Dutifulness is                     a two-way street.<\/p>\n<h3>What loyalty is<\/h3>\n<p>Loyalty is not servility, but a factor contributing to human                     dignity. A loyal person may be a poet or a tradesman, a formalist                     or an eccentric, a prime minister or a humble voter. He is                     one who is steadfast to an honourable obligation; one who                     does what he ought to do in his relations with other people.<\/p>\n<p>Loyalty is linked in our minds with honour. It is faithfulness                     and devotion to duty, and doing an hour&#8217;s work in an hour.                     It is one of the responsibilities of citizenship; an enthusiastic                     love of one&#8217;s country and pride in its ideals.<\/p>\n<p>A person is sailing close to a rocky shore if he depends                     upon appearances to guide him in deciding where he shall bestow                     his loyalties. Labels do not always accurately describe the                     goods to which they are attached. People seeking to avoid                     paying customs duty have been known to remove the English                     and French labels from the clothes they bought on vacation                     and replace them with labels bearing the names of their home-town                     tailors.<\/p>\n<p>Being loyal is not simply having an idea of allegiance filled                     with emotion. It imposes ethical requirements. Whether to                     be loyal to this person or that, to prefer this to that of                     two possible objects, involves choice, and to choose is to                     have a distinction of good and evil, or at least of better                     or worse.<\/p>\n<p>It is helpful to test one&#8217;s loyalties by answering two questions:                     (1) What do I believe? (2) To what ideas, causes and principles                     do I pledge my allegiance?<\/p>\n<p>This means walking all around the matters that are subject                     to loyalty and evaluating the data we pick up. The person                     who does that is his own man, making up his mind carefully,                     intelligently and honestly.<\/p>\n<p>The old authoritarian systems provided a clear set of rules,                     but people today do not give their loyalty blindly. Their                     research provides them with additional or stronger reasons                     for being loyal, or it disabuses their minds of the worthiness                     of the person or group to be given loyalty.<\/p>\n<p>Loyalty to a cause should not prevent a person from thinking                     for himself. One of the evidences of being educated is loyalty                     to truth, and what is true may be found by examining the subject,                     discounting prejudices and judging fairly. Confucius said                     once when someone asked him about something to which he could                     not give an answer: &#8220;I merely discussed the two sides of the                     question.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Some men and women are troubled by the idea that being loyal                     somehow abridges their freedom, but in fact loyalty is part                     of the tapestry of liberty. Free people pin their faith to                     liberty democratically arrived at and loyally maintained.                     Parliaments and employers can compel people under their jurisdiction                     to obey or to submit, but if they desire loyalty from free                     people they have to inspire it and merit it.<\/p>\n<h3>There are many loyalties<\/h3>\n<p>There are several loyalties-beckoning to every person: loyalty                     to his group, his firm, his family, and his country.<\/p>\n<p>Loyalty is the cement that holds a group together. It may                     be a small group like the family or a baseball team, or a                     big group like that in a production plant or a nation. Loyalty                     to a group is not only a desirable attribute: it is a practical                     necessity and the only way to make and keep the friendships                     everyone must have.<\/p>\n<p>In its simplest form it may be illustrated by the needs                     of the production line. Slipshod work at one work station                     will have to be made good at the next, so part of the worker&#8217;s                     creed is to do his job so as not to let the gang down.<\/p>\n<p>Every worker and executive has an obligation to be loyal                     to the company for which he works. He should be proud of the                     firm and feel a reflected glory when he reads reports of its                     activities. These may range from a game played by its softball                     team to its annual report to shareholders. The goodwill and                     loyalty of the working force is one of the essentials of a                     successfully conducted enterprise, and the company should                     and must show that it deserves this loyalty.<\/p>\n<p>To attain his highest development as a human being, a man                     needs to think well of his work. He must be proud to be a                     vital part of a team. He wants to be able to brag about his                     firm. The valuation he places upon his services is likely                     to be mirrored in the reaction which others have to him, so                     the worker who speaks slightingly of his company belittles                     himself.<\/p>\n<p>Loyalty is fitting in kings and company presidents as well                     as in commoners and workmen. Membership in the management                     group implies an intense loyalty to the company and the ability                     to win and hold the respect of the workers.<\/p>\n<p>A salesman said in Robert E. Moore&#8217;s <em>The Human Side of                     Selling <\/em>(Harper &amp; Bros., New York, 1951): &#8220;I am the sort                     of guy who wouldn&#8217;t work for a boss if I didn&#8217;t believe in                     him, and I wouldn&#8217;t work for a company if I could not be proud                     to represent it. How in the world could I sell with confidence                     otherwise &#8211; and how could I have any self-respect?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Anyone who is connected with a business in which he has                     not faith, or is working under a person he does not think                     highly of, cannot do his best work and will find it difficult                     to give his loyalty. He should look for another connection,                     in fairness both to himself and the company.<\/p>\n<h3>Patriotism<\/h3>\n<p>What is patriotism? A nineteenth century orator described                     it in this way: &#8220;This almost universal instinct for which                     more men have given their lives than for any other cause,                     and which counts more martyrs than even religion itself. It                     has produced great and splendid deeds of heroic bravery and                     of unselfish devotion; inspired art and stimulated literature                     and furthered science; fostered liberty and advanced civilization.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The word &#8220;patriot&#8221; comes from the French, where it was used                     as early as the fifteenth century in the sense of &#8220;citizen&#8221;.                     By-and-by it came to imply a <em>good <\/em>citizen and a lover                     of his country. Patriotism is a belief in and a desire for                     the national good, a lively sense of collective responsibility.<\/p>\n<p>Patriotism is nothing to be ashamed of. It is founded on                     valid principles and supported by great virtues. It stands                     for the good objectives of one&#8217;s country and inspires the                     individual to sacrifice his selfish interests when the broader                     interests of his fellow citizens make it desirable. He knows                     that his own welfare is best served by that which he knows                     to be most advantageous for the others.<\/p>\n<p>Patriotism exists in normal times as well as in times of                     crisis. It does not need a hate object like an enemy to keep                     it alive. Those who are truly patriotic do not lapse into                     disinterest between wars, but are diligent in carrying out                     their peace-time duties and responsibilities.<\/p>\n<p>Some, of course, exalt what they think of as being patriotism                     and enshrine it as an absolute and unconditional virtue to                     which even their conscience must bow. Such a spirit stirs                     up national vanity and people who have it will seek to enhance                     the greatness of their country at the expense of ill to its                     neighbours.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Chauvinism&#8221;, a word coming into general use in the language                     used by organizations promoting new ideas, means zealous and                     belligerent national spirit. It was named after N. Chauvin,                     a soldier in Napoleon&#8217;s army noted for his loud-mouthed patriotism.                     It is patriotic feeling isolated from other moral values.                     It starts with the firm belief that your country is superior                     to all other countries because you were born in it, and it                     tends toward the making of blind zealots.<\/p>\n<p>Far above this in virtue and value is true patriotism, which                     is a sense of public duty. We give proof of patriotism when                     we take our full share of public service and responsibility                     within our communities. Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote in his <em>Journals<\/em>:                     &#8220;I have generally found the gravest and most useful citizens                     are not the easiest provoked to swell the noise, though they                     may be punctual at the polls.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The government&#8217;s duty<\/h3>\n<p>Men and women in many countries and over many centuries                     have drafted charters setting forth what they believe governments                     should be and should do. The nearer governments come to meeting                     these requirements, the more loyal support they receive from                     citizens. Loyalty is given to a political system because people                     have hope and confidence that their aspirations can be met                     within that system.<\/p>\n<p>A government may derive its <em>power <\/em>from words printed                     in statute books, but its <em>principles <\/em>come from much                     farther back. The <em>Bible <\/em>and Greek and Latin classics                     constitute the bed-rock of the civilization in which democratic                     governments exist. Some of the watchwords of the ethical environment                     are truth, liberty, justice, humaneness, religious freedom,                     and respect for the worth and dignity of the individual. The                     state that has these virtues as its guide is the state to                     which intelligent citizens can give unstinted loyalty.<\/p>\n<h3>Patriotism sets standards<\/h3>\n<p>We demand of the government to which we are loyal that it                     maintain certain standards. We ask that it shall be inflexibly                     open and truthful. We require that it manage the life of the                     country so as to secure the greatest happiness of the greatest                     number of its citizens, and an adequate minimum standard of                     living for all.<\/p>\n<p>Rebecca West, author of many books of criticism and biography                     as well as novels, wrote: &#8220;A nation that deserves loyalty                     is one where all talents are generously recognized, all forgivable                     oddities forgiven, all viciousness quietly frustrated, and                     those who lack talent honoured for equivalent contributions                     of graciousness.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Governments must deal with a great complexity of affairs,                     and must be entrusted with great powers. They need to hold                     the imagination of the people, to show a sense of national                     purpose, to give everyone something tangible to be loyal to.                     Most people have a need to be needed. If individuals feel                     &#8220;lost&#8221; or not part of the picture they will be driven to shoddy                     substitutes to bolster their ego.<\/p>\n<p>People&#8217;s desires are not wholly materialistic. Governments                     have made available much that contributes to improved living                     conditions: health services, pensions, minimum wages, short                     working hours, and so forth.<\/p>\n<p>Having reached this plateau, far above the level of fifty                     years ago, people have new desires. They value material security,                     to be sure, but they have developed psychological needs: recognition                     and respect as individuals and appreciation for their contribution                     to the well-being of the country. They are looking to government                     to answer their earnest wish for the opportunity to do something,                     to join in something, that will fill their lives interestingly.<\/p>\n<p>Sometimes the spirit of loyalty suffers by the emphasis                     placed upon &#8220;rights&#8221;. There are natural rights and civil rights.                     Every person has the right to exist, and to live his life                     in the best way he can. Civil rights are those which belong                     to a person by virtue of the society in which he lives. He                     wants that society to justify his loyalty by the opportunities                     it gives him to realize his hopes and fulfil his ambitions.<\/p>\n<p>In return, he owes duty to the state. The ultimate in its                     patriotic conception of duty is seen in the death of Socrates.                     When he was offered a way of escape from drinking the hemlock,                     Socrates said: &#8220;A voice within me is telling me that I must                     not disobey my country&#8217;s laws and do what is wrong in order                     to save my life.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Patriotism in Canada<\/h3>\n<p>A country is not judged only by its political and economic                     affairs, but also by the spirit of its people.<\/p>\n<p>Canadian patriotism has been of a sober kind, little given                     to such commemorations as have been the custom in other countries.                     It has, nevertheless, burned with a steady flame in all times                     of stress and danger. In the words of a Theban play: &#8220;It is                     not such a place as is famed in song and story, But its name                     is great in the hearts of those that live here.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Loyalty to our country means that we feel we have a stake                     in it, that it embodies our great democratic traditions in                     education, religion, philosophy, science and government, and                     that without it we should be lesser people.<\/p>\n<p>We have, in our 107 years of history as a nation, advocated                     far-reaching changes in our governmental form and have carried                     through many of them successfully. It is well to remind ourselves                     of the high purpose of the nation&#8217;s founders. Frank Underhill                     said at the Couchiching Conference ten years ago: [Canada&#8217;s]                     &#8220;first government, composed of French as well as of English                     cabinet ministers, in the speech from the throne in the first                     session of the first parliament, proclaimed that &#8216;a new nationality&#8217;                     had come into being. Nationality was taken by everyone in                     those days to be the final form in which a people consolidated                     themselves in order to live the good life.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Today&#8217;s effort might well be to renew the sense of great                     purpose and high destiny that inspired our early years as                     a nation. We are richer, more numerous, and more powerful                     than our ancestors were when they laid the foundation of Canada.                     In recent years we have, in the face of grave national danger,                     shown that patriotism is not simply sentiment, but an opportunity                     for stern effort and sacrifice.<\/p>\n<p>People of many national strains form our population, living                     on terms of personal civility while working out ways of living                     together in perfect harmony, loyal to the same principles.                     The streams of all the local patriotisms will come together,                     some day, to form one river.<\/p>\n<h3>World citizenship<\/h3>\n<p>Love of our own land does not imply despising other lands,                     any more than love of one&#8217;s mother implies despising other                     mothers.<\/p>\n<p>There are 150 different nationalities on the earth, some                     large and some impracticably small. All of them have ideals,                     desires and fears, just as Canada has. Every serious problem                     is global, affecting all nations. Consider pollution, trade,                     peace, health, population, energy, food, and human rights:                     everyone on earth has a stake in solving these problems. As                     H. G. Wells expressed it, &#8220;The affairs and interests of every                     modern community extend to the uttermost parts of the earth.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A person who wishes his country to prosper, not only within                     its own geographical boundaries but as part of the world,                     is both an intelligent patriot and a citizen of the world.<\/p>\n<p>In an address at Harvard University, Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh,                     C.S.C., said: &#8220;What I would suggest is that everyone in the                     world would be allowed to hold dual citizenship &#8211; to be a                     citizen of the nation in which he or she happens to be born,                     and, in addition, to be able to qualify for world citizenship.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Eighteen hundred years before that address, Marcus Aurelius                     Antoninus declared: &#8220;My city and my country, so far as I am                     Antoninus, is Rome, but so far as I am a man, it is the world.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A vague notion of attachment to the whole human race is                     ineffective, but feeling that we are world citizens would                     be a declaration of interdependence. It would give us a feeling                     of our common humanity, shared hope for our spaceship earth,                     and a sense of brotherhood as members of the crew.<\/p>\n<h3>Divided loyalty<\/h3>\n<p>One loyalty does not exclude others. People have many biases                     &#8211; in favour of their political party, their church, their                     school, their firm, their family.<\/p>\n<p>John Galsworthy, author of <em>The Forsyte Saga<\/em>, wrote                     a play entitled <em>Loyalties<\/em>. It presented for consideration,                     in form of the drama, the confusion sometimes worked in the                     human mind by the cross purposes of conflicting loyalties                     of various sorts. Galsworthy showed these being stimulated                     or repressed by such factors as instinct, desire, racial prejudice,                     class feeling, professional caste and family ties.<\/p>\n<p>Different loyalties, none of them unworthy in itself, need                     to be appraised as to their relative worth in relation to                     the others. There are such things as priorities.<\/p>\n<p>Should a conflict of loyalties occur, the remedy is to step                     a little aside, out of the bustle of affairs, and calmly take                     a prospect of things.<\/p>\n<p>Everything in the world is changing so rapidly that long-accustomed                     loyalties become strained. Every age has held many opinions                     which subsequent ages have deemed not only false but absurd.                     There never was a harder time to know where truth may be found                     than now.<\/p>\n<p>Young people are undergoing an acute crisis of identification.                     They have, as no preceding generation had, freedom of choice.                     They can decide to play by old rules or to formulate new rules,                     to be loyal to the things to which their fathers were loyal                     or to seek new loyalties.<\/p>\n<p>It is not disloyal to raise questions about the conduct                     of government or business or education or any other function                     carried on in society. It is only by broadening our minds                     that we can learn where, precisely, our loyalty should be                     given.<\/p>\n<p>Loyalty must leave a person room to dissent, but it is dead                     set against those who do not distinguish between dissent and                     obstruction, and lack the self-control and the love of the                     democratic process that keeps criticism within the bounds                     of reason and decency.<\/p>\n<p>Loyalty can ruin itself by excess of loyalty; by being everlastingly                     talked about. It is sometimes best served by silence. Aldous                     Huxley made the need for restraint clear in <em>Music at Night<\/em>,                     where he wrote: &#8220;Silence is an integral part of all good music.                     Compared with Beethoven&#8217;s or Mozart&#8217;s, the ceaseless torrent                     of Wagner&#8217;s music is very poor in silence. Perhaps that is                     one of the reasons why it seems to much less significant than                     theirs. It &#8216;says&#8217; less because it is always speaking.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Let your loyalties show<\/h3>\n<p>Loyalty is not a fugitive memory for grandmothers and grandfathers                     to tell about. It is an urgent need in all life situations                     here and now, essential in every worthy relationship between                     human beings.<\/p>\n<p>We should not be laggard or timid about proclaiming our                     loyalties upon proper occasions, or we may turn out to be                     insignificant, like the point in Euclid&#8217;s definition: &#8220;A point                     is that which has position, but no magnitude.&#8221; Being loyal                     includes being men and women who show resolution in following                     a path that they sense is the right path.<\/p>\n<p>It is bestowing a wealth of praise when it is said of a                     person that he is loyal &#8211; loyal to great causes, to his friends,                     to his firm, to his family and to his country.<\/p>\n<p>Professor Josiah Royce, of Harvard University, used to say                     that there are two kinds of loyalty. One is devotion to great                     causes. The other is not exciting, but it is the more important                     because it is with us every day. It is inherent in the hundreds                     of duties that we must do. It is the life-blood of team-work.                     It embraces adherence to duty, keeping promises, and faithfulness                     to ideals.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[54],"class_list":["post-3754","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-54"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 55, No. 2 - February 1974 - Something About Loyalty - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-55-no-2-february-1974-something-about-loyalty\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 55, No. 2 - February 1974 - Something About Loyalty - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Loyalty is the noblest word in the catalogue of social virtue. So wrote John Ruskin in The Seven Lamps of Architecture, a book that is as appropriate a guide to building a life as to building a cathedral. Loyalty represents something vital, a concept, a way of life. 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So wrote John Ruskin in The Seven Lamps of Architecture, a book that is as appropriate a guide to building a life as to building a cathedral. Loyalty represents something vital, a concept, a way of life. 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