LOYALTY
I
To be loyal to his cause is the finest
tribute that can be paid to any man. And since
loyalty to the Irish cause has been the great virtue
of Irishmen through all history, it is time to have
some clear thinking as to who are the Irish rebels
and who the true men. When a stupid Government,
grasping our reverence for fidelity, tried to ban our
heroes by calling them felons, it was natural we should
rejoin by writing “The Felons of our Land”
and heap ridicule on their purpose. But once this
end was achieved we should have reverted to the normal
attitude and written up as the true Irish Loyalists,
Brian the Great, and Shane the Proud, the valiant
Owen Roe and the peerless Tone, Mitchel and Davis irreconcilables
all. When men revolt against an established evil
it is their loyalty to the outraged truth we honour.
We do not extol a rebel who rebels for rebellion’s
sake. Let us be clear on this point, or when
we shall have re-established our freedom after centuries
of effort it shall be open to every knave and traitor
to challenge our independence and plot to readmit
the enemy. Loyalty is the fine attribute of the
fine nature; the word has been misused and maligned
in Ireland: let us restore it to its rightful
honour by remembering it to be the virtue of our heroes
of all time. In considering it from this view-point
we shall find occasion to touch on delicate positions
that have often baffled and worried us the
asserting of our rights while using the machinery
of the Government that denies them, the burning question
of consistency, our attitude towards the political
adventurer on one hand, and towards the honest man
of half-measures on the other. Loyalty involves
all this. And it shows that the man who revolts
to win freedom is the same as he who dies to defend
it. He does not change his face and nature with
the changing times. He is loyal always and most
wonderfully lovable, because in the darkest times,
when banned as wild, wicked and rebelly, he is loyal
still as from the beginning, and will be to the end.
Yes, Tone is the true Irish Loyalist, and every aider
and abettor of the enemy a rebel to Ireland and the
Irish race.
II
When you insist on examining the question
in the light of first principles your opportunist
opponent at once feels the weakness of his position
and always turns the point on your consistency.
It is well, then, in advance to understand the relative
value and importance of argument as argument in the
statement of any case. A body of principles is
primarily of value, not as affording a case that can
be argued with ingenuity, but as enshrining one great
principle that shines through and informs the rest,
that illumines the mind of the individual, that warms,
clarifies and invigorates that, so to speak,
puts the mind in focus, gets the facts of existence
into perspective, and gives the individual everything
in its right place and true proportion. It brings
a man to the point where he does not dispute but believes.
He has been wandering about cold and irresolute, tasting
all philosophies, or none, and drinking deep despair.
He does not understand the want in his soul while
he has been looking for some panacea for its cure till
the great light streams on him, and instead of receiving
something he finds himself. That is it.
There is a power of vision latent in us, clouded by
error; the true philosophy dissipates the cloud and
leaves the vision clear, wonderful and inspiring.
He who acquired that vision is impervious to argument it
is not that he despises argument; on the contrary,
he always uses it to its full strength. But he
has had awakened within him something which the mere
logician can never deduce, and that mysterious something
is the explanation of his transformed life. He
was a doubter, a falterer, a failure; he has become
a believer, a fighter, a conqueror. You miss
his significance completely when you take him for a
theorist. The theorist propounds a view to which
he must convert the world; the philosopher has a rule
of life to immediately put into practice. His
spirit flashes with a swiftness that can be encircled
by no theory. It is his glory to have over and
above a new penetrating argument in the mind a
new and wonderful vitality in the blood. The unbeliever,
near by, still muddled by his cold theories, will
argue and debate till his intellect is in a tangle.
He fails to see that a man of intellectual agility
might frame a theory and argue it out ably, and then
suddenly turn over and with equal dexterity argue
the other side. Do we not have set debates with
speakers appointed on each side? That is dialectic a
trick of the mind. But philosophy is the wine
of the spirit. The capacity then to argue the
point is not the justification of a philosophy.
That justification must be found in the virtue of the
philosophy that gives its believer vision and grasp
of life as a whole, that warms and quickens his heart
and makes him in spirit buoyant, beautiful, wise and
daring.
III
Let us come now to that burning question
of consistency. “Very well, you won’t
acknowledge the English Crown. Why then use English
coins and stamps? You don’t recognise the
Parliament at Westminster. Why then recognise
the County Councils created by Bill at Westminster?
Why avail of all the Local Government machinery?” and
so forth. The argument is a familiar one, and
the answer is simple. Though no guns are thundering
now, Ireland is virtually in a state of war. We
are fighting to recover independence. The enemy
has had to relax somewhat in the exigencies of the
struggle and to concede all these positions of local
government and enterprise now in question. We
take these posts as places conceded in the fight and
avail of them to strengthen, develop and uplift the
country and prepare her to carry the last post.
Surely this is adequate. On a field of battle
it is always to the credit of a general to capture
an enemy’s post and use it for the final victory.
It is a sign of the battle’s progress, and tells
the distant watchers on the hills how the fight is
faring and who is going to win. There would be
consternation away from the field only if word should
come that the soldiers had gone into the tents of
the enemy, acknowledging him and accepting his flag.
That is the point to question. There can be no
defence for the occupying of any post conceded by
the enemy. It may be held for or against Ireland;
any man accepting it and surrendering his flag to hold
it stands condemned thereby. That is clear.
Yet it may be objected that such a clear choice is
not put to most of those undertaking the local government
of Ireland, that few are conscious of such an issue
and few governed by it. It is true. But
for all that the machinery of local government is
clearly under popular control, and as clearly worked
for an immediate good, preparing for a greater end.
Men unaware of it are unconsciously working for the
general development of the country and recovering
her old power and influence. Those conscious of
the deeper issue enter every position to further that
development and make the end obvious when the alien
Government finding those powers conceded
to sap further resistance are on the contrary used
to conquer wider fields endeavours to force
the popular government back to the purposes of an
old and failing tyranny. That is the nature of
the struggle now. At periods the enemy tries
to stem the movement, and then the fight becomes general
and keen around a certain position. In our time
there were the Land Leagues, the Land War, fights
for Home Rule, Universities, Irish; and these fights
ended in Land Acts, Local Government Acts, University
Acts, and the conceding of pride of place to the native
language in university life. Every position gained
is a step forward; it is accepted as such, and so
is justified. For anyone who grasps the serious
purpose of recovering Ireland’s independence
all along the line, the suggestion that we should
abandon all machinery of local government and enterprise because
they are “Government positions” to
men definitely attached to the alien garrison is so
foolish as not to be even entertained. When our
attitude is questioned let it be made clear.
That is the final answer to the man who challenges
our consistency: we are carrying the trenches
of the enemy.
IV
Even while dismissing a false idea
of consistency we have to make clear another view
still remote from the general mind. If we are
to have an effective army of freedom we must enrol
only men who have a clear conception of the goal,
a readiness to yield full allegiance, and a determination
to fight always so as to reflect honour on the flag.
The importance of this will be felt only when we come
to deal with concrete cases. While human nature
is what it is we will have always on the outskirts
of every movement a certain type of political adventurer
who is ready to transfer his allegiance from one party
to another according as he thinks the time serves.
He has no principle but to be always with the ascendant
party, and to succeed in that aim he is ready to court
and betray every party in turn. As a result,
he is a character well known to all. The honest
man who has been following the wrong path, and after
earnest inquiry comes to the flag, we readily distinguish.
But it is fatal to any enterprise where the adventurer
is enlisted and where his influence is allowed to
dominate. It may seem strange that such men are
given entry to great movements: the explanation
is found in the desire of pioneers to make converts
at once and convince the unconverted by the confidence
of growing numbers. We ignore the danger to our
growing strength when the adventurer comes along,
loud in protest of his support he is always
affable and plausible, and is received as a “man
of experience”; and in our anxiety for further
strength we are apt to admit him without reserve.
But we must make sure of our man. We must keep
in mind that an alliance with the adventurer is more
dangerous than his opposition; and we must remember
the general public, typified by the man in the street
whom we wish to convince, is quietly studying us,
attracted perhaps by our principles and coming nearer
to examine. If he knows nothing else, he knows
the unprincipled man, and when he sees such in our
ranks and councils he will not wait to argue or ask
questions; he will go away and remain away. The
extent to which men are ruled by the old adage, “Show
me your company and I’ll tell you what you are,”
is more widespread than we think. Moreover, consistency
in a fine sense is involved in our decision.
We fight for freedom, not for the hope of material
profit or comfort, but because every fine instinct
of manhood demands that man be free, and life beautiful
and brave, and surely in such a splendid battle to
have as allies mean, crafty profit-seekers would be
amazing. Let us be loyal in the deep sense, and
let us not be afraid of being few at first. An
earnest band is more effective than a discreditable
multitude. That band will increase in numbers
and strength till it becomes the nucleus of an army
that will be invincible.
V
The fine sense of consistency that
keeps us clear of the adventurer decides also our
attitude to the well-meaning man of half-measures.
He says separation from England is not possible now
and suggests some alternative, if not Home Rule, Grattan’s
Parliament, or leaving it an open question. In
the general view this seems sensible, and we are tempted
to make an alliance based on such a ground; and the
alliance is made. What ensues? Men come
together who believe in complete freedom, others who
believe in partial freedom that may lead to complete
freedom, and others who are satisfied with partial
freedom as an end. Before long the alliance ends
in a deadlock. The man of the most far-reaching
view knows that every immediate action taken must
be consistent with the wider view and the farther
goal, if that goal is to be attained; and he finds
that his ultimate principle is frequently involved
in some action proposed for the moment. When
such a moment comes he must be loyal to his flag and
to a principle that if not generally acknowledged is
an abiding rule with him; but his allies refuse to
be bound by a principle that is an unwritten law for
him because the law is not written down for them.
This is the root of the trouble. The friends,
thinking to work together for some common purpose,
find the unsettled issue intrudes, and a debate ensues
that leads to angry words, recriminations, bad feeling
and disruption. The alliance based on half measures
has not fulfilled its own purpose, but it has sown
suspicion between the honest men whom it brought together;
that is no good result from the practical proposal.
There is an inference: men who are conscious of
a clear complete demand should form their own plans,
equally full of care and resolution, and go ahead
on their own account. But we hear a plaintive
cry abroad: “Oh, another split; that’s
Irishmen all over can never unite,”
etc. We will not turn aside for the plaintive
people; but let it be understood there can be an independent
co-operation, where of use, with those honest men
who will not go the whole way. That independent
co-operation can serve the full purpose of the binding
alliance that has proved fatal. Above all, let
there be no charge of bad faith against the earnest
man who chooses other ways than ours; it is altogether
indefensible because we disagree with him to call
his motives in question. Often he is as earnest
as we are; often has given longer and greater service,
and only qualifies his own attitude in anxiety to
meet others. To this we cannot assent, but to
charge him with bad faith is flagrantly unjust and
always calamitous. In getting rid of the deadlock
we have too often fallen to furiously fighting with
one another. Let us bear this in mind, and concern
ourselves more with the common enemy; but let not the
hands of the men in the vanguard be tied by alien
King, Constitution, or Parliament. All the conditions
grow more definite and seem, perhaps, too exacting;
remember the greatness of the enterprise. Suppose
in the building of a mighty edifice the architect
at any point were careless or slurred over a difficulty,
trusting to luck to bring it right, how the whole
building would go awry, and what a mighty collapse
would follow. Let us stick to our colours and
have no fear. When all these principles have
been combined into one consistent whole, a light will
flash over the land and the old spirit will be reborn;
the mean will be purged of their meanness, the timid
heartened with a fine courage, and the fearless will
be justified: the land will be awake, militant,
and marching to victory.
VI
This is, surely, the fine view of
loyalty. Let us write it on our banners and proclaim
it to the world. It is consistent, honourable,
fearless and immutable. What is said here to-day
with enthusiasm, exactness and care, will stand without
emendation or enlargement, if in a temporary reverse
we are called to stand in the dock to-morrow; or if,
finely purged in the battle of freedom, we come through
our last fight with splendid triumph, our loyalty
is there still, shining like a great sun, the same
beautiful, unchanging thing that has lighted us through
every struggle perhaps now to guide us in
framing a constitution and giving to a world, distracted
by kings, presidents and theorists, a new polity for
nations. A waverer, half-caught between the light,
half fearful with an old fear, pleads: “This
is too much we are men, not angels.”
Precisely, we are not angels; and because of our human
weakness, our erring minds, our sudden passions, the
most confident of us may at any moment find himself
in the mud. What, then, will uplift him if he
has been a waverer in principle as well as in fact?
He is helpless, disgraced and undone. Let him
know in time we do not set up fine principles in a
fine conceit that we can easily live up to them, but
in the full consciousness that we cannot possibly live
away from them. That is the bed-rock truth.
When the man of finer faith by any slip comes to the
earth, he has to uplift him a staff that never fails,
and to guide him a principle that strengthens him for
another fight, to go forth, in a sense Alexander never
dreamed of, to conquer new worlds. ’Tis
the faith that is in him, and the flag he serves, that
make a man worthy; and the meanest may be with the
highest if he be true and give good service.
Let us put by then the broken reed and the craft of
little minds, and give us for our saving hope the
banner of the angels and the loyalty of gods and men.