Off the Shelf: In the School of War by Roger J. Spiller
Read from the introduction to In the School of War by Roger J. Spiller:
"After artillery deploys for battle, arranges itself into batteries, a commander usually orders a ranging shot, a round or two meant to estimate how far his guns will reach. Or so it was before modern science intervened. Although we don’t know for sure, someone among Henry V’s archers at Agincourt—masters of the lethal, indirect firepower that would turn that day in his favor—must have fired such a shot, adding one more tactical detail to the King’s picture of the field where he and his men were about to fight. Centuries later, Robert E. Lee reserved to himself the order for the first shot as he looked over the open fields at Fredericksburg and General Burnside’s Grand Divisions forming for their attack. In those days, after throwing a few cannonballs in the enemy’s direction, a commander could see for himself just when the enemy’s advancing troops might fall under the shadow of his imaginary artillery fan. Then he could decide whether to open up his artillery to spoil the attack or, waiting longer, to kill it outright—the “it” being hundreds or even thousands of other human beings.
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