<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0080" id="link2HCH0080"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER X—THE PLATEAU OF MONT-SAINT-JEAN </h2>
<h3> The battery was unmasked at the same moment with the ravine. </h3>
<p>Sixty cannons and the thirteen squares darted lightning point-blank on the
cuirassiers. The intrepid General Delort made the military salute to the
English battery.</p>
<p>The whole of the flying artillery of the English had re-entered the
squares at a gallop. The cuirassiers had not had even the time for a halt.
The disaster of the hollow road had decimated, but not discouraged them.
They belonged to that class of men who, when diminished in number,
increase in courage.</p>
<p>Wathier's column alone had suffered in the disaster; Delort's column,
which Ney had deflected to the left, as though he had a presentiment of an
ambush, had arrived whole.</p>
<p>The cuirassiers hurled themselves on the English squares.</p>
<p>At full speed, with bridles loose, swords in their teeth pistols in fist,—such
was the attack.</p>
<p>There are moments in battles in which the soul hardens the man until the
soldier is changed into a statue, and when all this flesh turns into
granite. The English battalions, desperately assaulted, did not stir.</p>
<p>Then it was terrible.</p>
<p>All the faces of the English squares were attacked at once. A frenzied
whirl enveloped them. That cold infantry remained impassive. The first
rank knelt and received the cuirassiers on their bayonets, the second
ranks shot them down; behind the second rank the cannoneers charged their
guns, the front of the square parted, permitted the passage of an eruption
of grape-shot, and closed again. The cuirassiers replied by crushing them.
Their great horses reared, strode across the ranks, leaped over the
bayonets and fell, gigantic, in the midst of these four living wells. The
cannon-balls ploughed furrows in these cuirassiers; the cuirassiers made
breaches in the squares. Files of men disappeared, ground to dust under
the horses. The bayonets plunged into the bellies of these centaurs; hence
a hideousness of wounds which has probably never been seen anywhere else.
The squares, wasted by this mad cavalry, closed up their ranks without
flinching. Inexhaustible in the matter of grape-shot, they created
explosions in their assailants' midst. The form of this combat was
monstrous. These squares were no longer battalions, they were craters;
those cuirassiers were no longer cavalry, they were a tempest. Each square
was a volcano attacked by a cloud; lava contended with lightning.</p>
<p>The square on the extreme right, the most exposed of all, being in the
air, was almost annihilated at the very first shock. lt was formed of the
75th regiment of Highlanders. The bagpipe-player in the centre dropped his
melancholy eyes, filled with the reflections of the forests and the lakes,
in profound inattention, while men were being exterminated around him, and
seated on a drum, with his pibroch under his arm, played the Highland
airs. These Scotchmen died thinking of Ben Lothian, as did the Greeks
recalling Argos. The sword of a cuirassier, which hewed down the bagpipes
and the arm which bore it, put an end to the song by killing the singer.</p>
<p>The cuirassiers, relatively few in number, and still further diminished by
the catastrophe of the ravine, had almost the whole English army against
them, but they multiplied themselves so that each man of them was equal to
ten. Nevertheless, some Hanoverian battalions yielded. Wellington
perceived it, and thought of his cavalry. Had Napoleon at that same moment
thought of his infantry, he would have won the battle. This forgetfulness
was his great and fatal mistake.</p>
<p>All at once, the cuirassiers, who had been the assailants, found
themselves assailed. The English cavalry was at their back. Before them
two squares, behind them Somerset; Somerset meant fourteen hundred
dragoons of the guard. On the right, Somerset had Dornberg with the German
light-horse, and on his left, Trip with the Belgian carabineers; the
cuirassiers attacked on the flank and in front, before and in the rear, by
infantry and cavalry, had to face all sides. What mattered it to them?
They were a whirlwind. Their valor was something indescribable.</p>
<p>In addition to this, they had behind them the battery, which was still
thundering. It was necessary that it should be so, or they could never
have been wounded in the back. One of their cuirasses, pierced on the
shoulder by a ball from a biscayan,<SPAN href="#linknote-9"
name="linknoteref-9" id="noteref-9">9</SPAN> is in the collection of the
Waterloo Museum.</p>
<p>For such Frenchmen nothing less than such Englishmen was needed. It was no
longer a hand-to-hand conflict; it was a shadow, a fury, a dizzy transport
of souls and courage, a hurricane of lightning swords. In an instant the
fourteen hundred dragoon guards numbered only eight hundred. Fuller, their
lieutenant-colonel, fell dead. Ney rushed up with the lancers and
Lefebvre-Desnouettes's light-horse. The plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean was
captured, recaptured, captured again. The cuirassiers quitted the cavalry
to return to the infantry; or, to put it more exactly, the whole of that
formidable rout collared each other without releasing the other. The
squares still held firm.</p>
<p>There were a dozen assaults. Ney had four horses killed under him. Half
the cuirassiers remained on the plateau. This conflict lasted two hours.</p>
<p>The English army was profoundly shaken. There is no doubt that, had they
not been enfeebled in their first shock by the disaster of the hollow road
the cuirassiers would have overwhelmed the centre and decided the victory.
This extraordinary cavalry petrified Clinton, who had seen Talavera and
Badajoz. Wellington, three-quarters vanquished, admired heroically. He
said in an undertone, "Sublime!"</p>
<p>The cuirassiers annihilated seven squares out of thirteen, took or spiked
sixty pieces of ordnance, and captured from the English regiments six
flags, which three cuirassiers and three chasseurs of the Guard bore to
the Emperor, in front of the farm of La Belle Alliance.</p>
<p>Wellington's situation had grown worse. This strange battle was like a
duel between two raging, wounded men, each of whom, still fighting and
still resisting, is expending all his blood.</p>
<p>Which of the two will be the first to fall?</p>
<p>The conflict on the plateau continued.</p>
<p>What had become of the cuirassiers? No one could have told. One thing is
certain, that on the day after the battle, a cuirassier and his horse were
found dead among the woodwork of the scales for vehicles at
Mont-Saint-Jean, at the very point where the four roads from Nivelles,
Genappe, La Hulpe, and Brussels meet and intersect each other. This
horseman had pierced the English lines. One of the men who picked up the
body still lives at Mont-Saint-Jean. His name is Dehaze. He was eighteen
years old at that time.</p>
<p>Wellington felt that he was yielding. The crisis was at hand.</p>
<p>The cuirassiers had not succeeded, since the centre was not broken
through. As every one was in possession of the plateau, no one held it,
and in fact it remained, to a great extent, with the English. Wellington
held the village and the culminating plain; Ney had only the crest and the
slope. They seemed rooted in that fatal soil on both sides.</p>
<p>But the weakening of the English seemed irremediable. The bleeding of that
army was horrible. Kempt, on the left wing, demanded reinforcements.
"There are none," replied Wellington; "he must let himself be killed!"
Almost at that same moment, a singular coincidence which paints the
exhaustion of the two armies, Ney demanded infantry from Napoleon, and
Napoleon exclaimed, "Infantry! Where does he expect me to get it? Does he
think I can make it?"</p>
<p>Nevertheless, the English army was in the worse case of the two. The
furious onsets of those great squadrons with cuirasses of iron and breasts
of steel had ground the infantry to nothing. A few men clustered round a
flag marked the post of a regiment; such and such a battalion was
commanded only by a captain or a lieutenant; Alten's division, already so
roughly handled at La Haie-Sainte, was almost destroyed; the intrepid
Belgians of Van Kluze's brigade strewed the rye-fields all along the
Nivelles road; hardly anything was left of those Dutch grenadiers, who,
intermingled with Spaniards in our ranks in 1811, fought against
Wellington; and who, in 1815, rallied to the English standard, fought
against Napoleon. The loss in officers was considerable. Lord Uxbridge,
who had his leg buried on the following day, had his knee shattered. If,
on the French side, in that tussle of the cuirassiers, Delort, l'Heritier,
Colbert, Dnop, Travers, and Blancard were disabled, on the side of the
English there was Alten wounded, Barne wounded, Delancey killed, Van
Meeren killed, Ompteda killed, the whole of Wellington's staff decimated,
and England had the worse of it in that bloody scale. The second regiment
of foot-guards had lost five lieutenant-colonels, four captains, and three
ensigns; the first battalion of the 30th infantry had lost 24 officers and
1,200 soldiers; the 79th Highlanders had lost 24 officers wounded, 18
officers killed, 450 soldiers killed. The Hanoverian hussars of
Cumberland, a whole regiment, with Colonel Hacke at its head, who was
destined to be tried later on and cashiered, had turned bridle in the
presence of the fray, and had fled to the forest of Soignes, sowing defeat
all the way to Brussels. The transports, ammunition-wagons, the
baggage-wagons, the wagons filled with wounded, on perceiving that the
French were gaining ground and approaching the forest, rushed headlong
thither. The Dutch, mowed down by the French cavalry, cried, "Alarm!" From
Vert-Coucou to Groentendael, for a distance of nearly two leagues in the
direction of Brussels, according to the testimony of eye-witnesses who are
still alive, the roads were encumbered with fugitives. This panic was such
that it attacked the Prince de Conde at Mechlin, and Louis XVIII. at
Ghent. With the exception of the feeble reserve echelonned behind the
ambulance established at the farm of Mont-Saint-Jean, and of Vivian's and
Vandeleur's brigades, which flanked the left wing, Wellington had no
cavalry left. A number of batteries lay unhorsed. These facts are attested
by Siborne; and Pringle, exaggerating the disaster, goes so far as to say
that the Anglo-Dutch army was reduced to thirty-four thousand men. The
Iron Duke remained calm, but his lips blanched. Vincent, the Austrian
commissioner, Alava, the Spanish commissioner, who were present at the
battle in the English staff, thought the Duke lost. At five o'clock
Wellington drew out his watch, and he was heard to murmur these sinister
words, "Blucher, or night!"</p>
<p>It was at about that moment that a distant line of bayonets gleamed on the
heights in the direction of Frischemont.</p>
<p>Here comes the change of face in this giant drama.</p>
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