OF THE USES OF CIVILITY
“Captain Ransome, it is not
permitted to you to know anything. It is
sufficient that you obey my order—which
permit me to repeat. If you perceive any movement
of troops in your front you are to open fire, and
if attacked hold this position as long as you can.
Do I make myself understood, sir?”
“Nothing could be plainer.
Lieutenant Price,”—this to an officer
of his own battery, who had ridden up in time to hear
the order—“the general’s meaning
is clear, is it not?”
“Perfectly.”
The lieutenant passed on to his post.
For a moment General Cameron and the commander of
the battery sat in their saddles, looking at each other
in silence. There was no more to say; apparently
too much had already been said. Then the superior
officer nodded coldly and turned his horse to ride
away. The artillerist saluted slowly, gravely,
and with extreme formality. One acquainted with
the niceties of military etiquette would have said
that by his manner he attested a sense of the rebuke
that he had incurred. It is one of the important
uses of civility to signify resentment.
When the general had joined his staff
and escort, awaiting him at a little distance, the
whole cavalcade moved off toward the right of the
guns and vanished in the fog. Captain Ransome
was alone, silent, motionless as an equestrian statue.
The gray fog, thickening every moment, closed in about
him like a visible doom.
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