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General Orders

The document outlines 11 general orders for sentries on guard duty. The orders include instructions to maintain vigilance, challenge all persons on or near the post, report violations, and only take orders from commanding officers and guards. The second document discusses how military professionals willingly submit to constraints like living where ordered, restrictions on speech and dress, and enduring difficult conditions like isolation, lack of sleep or food, and hard labor. They cease to control their own lives and fate as part of adopting their military profession.

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JM Balano
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
339 views1 page

General Orders

The document outlines 11 general orders for sentries on guard duty. The orders include instructions to maintain vigilance, challenge all persons on or near the post, report violations, and only take orders from commanding officers and guards. The second document discusses how military professionals willingly submit to constraints like living where ordered, restrictions on speech and dress, and enduring difficult conditions like isolation, lack of sleep or food, and hard labor. They cease to control their own lives and fate as part of adopting their military profession.

Uploaded by

JM Balano
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

11 General Orders

1. To take charge of this post and all government property in view.

2. To walk my post in a military manner, keeping always on the alert and observing everything that takes
place within sight or hearing.

3. To report all violations of orders I am instructed to enforce.

4. To repeat all calls from posts more distant from the guard house than my own.

5. To quit my post only when properly relieved.

6. To receive, obey, and pass on to the sentry who relieves me all orders from the Commanding Officer,
Officer of the Day, and Officers and Noncommissioned Officers of the Guard only.

7. To talk to no one except on the line of duty.

8. To give the alarm in the case of fire or disorder.

9. To call the Corporal of the Guard in any case not covered by instructions.

10. To salute all Officers and all Colors and Standards not cased.

11. To be especially watchful at night and during the time for challenging, to challenge all persons on or
near my post, and to allow no one to pass without proper authority.

Military Professionalism
Men who adopt the profession of arms submit their own free will to a law of perpetual constraints of their
own accord. They resist their right to live where they choose, to say what they think, to dress as they like.
It needs but an order to settle them from their families and dislocate their normal lives. In the world of
commands, they must rise, march, run, endure bad weather, and go out without sleep or food, be isolated
in some distant post, work until they drop. They have ceased to become masters of their own fate. If they
drop on their tracks, their ashes shall be scattered in the four winds, that is all part and parcel of their job.

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