Authors: Alessandro Barbero
In addition, Lewis's account confirmed that the cuirassier's new tactic of employing their short carbines had, in fact, some effect. "They fire on us with their carbines, then immediately do an about-turn while a comrade at my side collapses with a bullet full in the stomach and blood coming out of him as from a stuck pig. He barely had time to say, 'Lewis, I'm done for!' before he died. We continued firing at the Imperial Guard as they withdrew, and while I was reloading my rifle a ball struck it just above my left hand, breaking the ramrod and bending the barrel so much that I couldn't ram the cartridge down anymore." Perhaps Private Lewis added a little color to his narrative in order to impress the relatives he was writing to, but surely the confused succession of charges and firefights was proving destructive to the squares no less than to the squadrons attacking them.
T
he only attempt the French cavalry did not make was the one that Wellington most feared: to outflank his right wing west of Hougoumont, where the high ground defended by the Allied infantry descended rather steeply into a valley traversed by the Nivelles road. In that sector, the lancers and
chasseurs a cheval
attached to Pire's division remained in sight all day long, their long lances visible over the tops of the tall grain; every now and then, they advanced as though they were going to attack, but the intention of this maneuver was only to draw the fire of the enemy batteries and, if possible, to keep a few regiments of British cavalry busy on that end of the field, their attention distracted from more important sectors. Although Pire's men intervened occasionally to rescue some
tirailleur
squads from difficulties, the division as a whole held its position and never advanced. Thus in that part of the battlefield, much of the day was spent in an uninterrupted succession of skirmishes, in which neither side achieved any sort of decisive result.
Among the eyewitness accounts of the battle, those left by soldiers in the regiments stationed along the Nivelles road stand in sharp contrast to the rest. These sources do not seem to be describing a great battle, but rather a combat of outposts, or sometimes a guerrilla action. Sergeant Wheeler of the Fifty-first Light Infantry was posted with two men "behind a rock or large stone, well studded with brambles. This was somewhat to our right and in advance. About an hour after we were posted we saw an officer of Huzzars sneaking down to get a peep at our position. One of my men was what we term a dead shot, when he was within point-blank distance. I asked him if he could make sure of him. His reply was 'To be sure I can, but let him come nearer if he will, at all events his death warrant is signed and in my hands, if he should turn back.'" When the French officer was close enough, a single shot killed him, "and in a minute we had his body with the horse in our possession behind the rock. We had a rich booty, forty double Napoleons and had just time to strip the lace of the clothing of the dead Huzzar when we were called in to join the skirmishers."
Although the troops stationed in this sector took insignificant casualties in comparison with those engaged in other parts of the field, this war of ambushes and surprises was nonetheless fought ruthlessly. The British Hussars of the Seventh stayed in their saddles for a long time in an area where they apparently ran little risk; one sergeant was even accompanied by his wife, who was mounted on a pony. Suddenly, however, Hussars started falling, but no one could tell where the shots were coming from. The sergeant's wife got scared, and her husband began rudely insulting her; finally, a disgusted officer ordered him to send her to the rear. In the end, someone noticed that the irregular fire was coming from a field of rye, taller than a man, not far away on their left. A Hussar squadron rode into the field, surprised a group of
tirailleurs,
and hacked them to death with their sabers.
The most famous episode from this sector of the battlefield involved a cuirassier squadron that charged into the Allied squares and then tried to return to their own lines by retreating along the Nivelles road, only to find it blocked by a barricade of felled trees, and behind them a company of the Fifty-first. Sergeant Wheeler was there, and he left a graphic account of what happened: "There were nearly a hundred of them, all Cuirassiers. Down they rode full gallop, the trees thrown across the bridge on our left stopped them. We saw them comming and was prepared, we opened our fire, the work was done in an instant. By the time we had loaded and the smoke had cleared away, one and only one, solitary individual was seen running over the brow in our front. One other was saved by Capt. Jno. Ross from being put to death by some of the Brunswickers. I went to see what effect our fire had, and never before beheld such a sight in as short a space, as about an hundred men and horses could be huddled together, there they lay. Those who were shot dead were fortunate for the wounded horses in their struggles by plunging and kicking soon finished what we had began. In examining the men we could not find one that would be like to recover, and as we had other business to attend to we were obliged to leave them to their fate."
This incident made such an impression that no fewer than five witnesses recalled it spontaneously many years later, all but one of them insisting that the cuirassiers had been totally destroyed. The only man to provide a different version was Captain John Ross himself, the commander of the company stationed at the barricade. According to the captain, the cuirassiers—about seventy in all— had broken into one of the squares and there surrendered; then, however, finding themselves under the weak escort of a few light dragoons, the French had decided to tempt fate and tried to escape along the Nivelles road. Alerted to their approach by the irregular fire that accompanied their passage, Captain Ross posted his men behind the barricade and opened fire on the French when they arrived. The officer commanding the cuirassiers, realizing that the British dragoons were in close pursuit, preferred not to fall back into their hands and offered Captain Ross his sword. "There were twelve horses and eight Cuirassiers killed on this occasion, and the remainder, about sixty, were dismounted, taken, or dispersed," the captain concluded. The discrepancy between his numbers and those of Sergeant Wheeler is emblematic of the uncertainties involved in trusting the memories of the people who were there.
A
lthough weakened, the Allied cavalry deployed in support behind the squares kept trying to coordinate their own actions with those of the infantry and X. A. make the French squadrons pay a heavy price for their attacks. A Hanoverian officer had the impression that the enemy cavalry were deliberately drawn to within musket range by the feigned attacks of the British cavalry, and he observed that in the long run these maneuvers wore down the cuirassiers, who continued to attack but with steadily decreasing elan. Major von Goeben of the Third KGL Hussars also noticed that the enemy's desire to advance started to diminish after a while. Repeatedly, some squadrons of the Imperial Guard's
chasseurs ct cheval
rode up to within three or four hundred paces of his regiment, which had been reduced to some eighty men. "Their officers were wearing tall, broad bearskin hats, and on several occasions some of them rode up to us, challenging the officers of our regiment to single combat. As they were much stronger, the regiment could not accept the honor, and the enemy cavalry accomplished nothing other than to offer their big bearskin hats as targets to some of the sharpshooters in this Hanoverian Field Battalion."
In theory, the Imperial Guard's famous Red Lancers, armed as they were with their long weapons, should have been able to drive their attacks into the enemy ranks, as indeed they tried to do; but in reality the squares had so many bayonets confronting each rider that it was simply impossible to urge the horses close to them. Captain de Brack, a squadron commander, saw some of his exasperated lancers rise in their stirrups and hurl their lances like javelins at the enemy. The Red Lancers charged, among others, a Brunswicker square, but even in this case they were unable to get close enough to do much harm. As soon as the charge was repulsed, two of the German foot soldiers stepped out of formation and ran over to a French officer who was trapped under his fallen horse. They cleaned out his pockets and then shot him in the head with his own pistol amid shouts of "Shame! Shame" from nearby British troops.
In time, there were so many dead or dying men and—above all—horses around the squares that advancing past them was becoming physically difficult. The centers of the squares were also filled with wounded and dying soldiers, and because the enemy cavalry continued roving in the vicinity, the infantry could not send wounded officers to the rear, as was the custom in the British army. As for wounded enlisted men, no one even tried to evacuate them from the squares. The cavalry, however, paid an even higher price: The fire from the squares, though slow, irregular, and inefficient, began to tell in the long run. Gronow declared that he would never forget the strange sound—like "the noise of a violent hailstorm beating upon panes of glass"—that his guardsmen's musket balls made as they struck the enemy's cuirasses; he added that the cavalry charges, which the men had so feared at first, eventually became a relief, because when the cavalry advanced, the enemy artillery was obliged to stop firing.
Others make the same observation. The Royal Engineers officer who took refuge in a square quickly realized that the cavalry's horses would not dare to come into contact with the bayonets: "Now and then an individual more daring than the rest would ride up to the bayonets, wave his sword about and bully; but the mass held aloof, pulling up within five or six yards, as if, though afraid to go on, they were ashamed to retire. Our men soon discovered they had the best of it, and ever afterwards, when they heard the sound of cavalry approaching, appeared to consider the circumstance a pleasant change (from being cannonaded)!" Reynell, commander of the Seventy-first—whose position a short distance from the Hougoumont hedge was the farthest advanced of any regiment in Adam's brigade—wrote of "repeated
visits
from [the enemy's] Cuirassiers. I do not say
attacks,
because these Cavalry Columns on no occasion attempted to penetrate our Square, limiting their approach to within ten or fifteen yards of the front face, when they would wheel about, receiving such fire as we could bring to bear upon them, and as they retired,
en passant,
that from the neighbouring Square." Macready of the Thirtieth observed that his men "began to pity the useless perseverance of their assailants, and, as they advanced, would growl out, 'here come those d——d fools again.'"
In the late afternoon, as the sun was slowly starting to sink toward the horizon, the morale of the troops standing in the squares began to rise again. By contrast French cavalry officers, despite the fearlessness to which every enemy/Allied account of the battle paid tribute, were having more and more trouble gathering their men, whose numbers were steadily declining, and leading them in yet another advance. "In the midst of our terrible fire," Gronow later recalled, "their officers were seen as if on parade, keeping order in their ranks, and encouraging them. Unable to renew the charge, but unwilling to retreat, they brandished their swords with loud cries of 'Vive
l'Empereur!'"
The initial period of equilibrium had passed, and the number of those who sensed this shift grew steadily.
The British artillery had played a role in wearing down the cavalry's striking power, but less than has been generally supposed. One factor is found in Sir Augustus Frazer's description of the problems with the British guns, "which, by recoiling, had retired so as to lose their original and just position. But in a deep stiff soil, the fatigue of the horse artillerymen was great, and their best exertions were unable to move the guns again to the crest without horses; to employ horses was to ensure the loss of the animals." Thus the guns in many batteries were no longer on the crest of the ridge, as they had been in the beginning; many must have slid back down the reverse slope, from which they were no longer able to fire on the cavalry as it fell back.
More significantly, and contrary to the romanticized image of valiant British gunners returning to their weapons between one charge and the next and blasting away at the retreating enemy, the cavalry charges penetrated so far behind the Allied lines that disorganization and panic spread among the gunners. Wellington explicitly stated that many of them, having once abandoned their posts and reached safety, never returned to their guns until the end of the battle. According to Tom Morris, in at least one case exactly the opposite happened: When some French cavalry overran a battery posted within a few dozen meters of the squares, artillerymen rode with them, turned one of the guns around, and fired it point-blank at the enemy. Several loads of case-shot, colloquially known as "grapeshot," opened broad gaps in the ranks of the Seventy-third, and one demonstration of the steadiness of the British infantry is the fact that after every shot the men closed up their ranks, drawing their wounded into the center of the square and throwing their dead outside it, without allowing the French cavalry to exploit their temporary advantage.
Major Lloyd's battery, which had been stationed in front of Halkett's squares since morning, was one of the few whose gunners did indeed return to their weapons in the intervals between one charge and the other and fire case-shot into the rear of the enemy cavalry as they retreated in disorder down the slope. One of Lloyd's subordinates recalled, "In general, a Squadron or two came up the slope on our immediate front, and on their moving off at the appearance of our Cavalry, we took advantage to send destruction after them, and when advancing on our fire I have seen four or five men and horses piled upon each other like cards, the men not having even been displaced from the saddle, the effect of canister." And yet on at least one occasion the battery commander, seeing that the enemy cavalry was in retreat, rode back to the guns only to discover that none of his gunners had followed him. Lloyd dismounted, determined that the cannons were all loaded—a measure of how precipitously the gunners had abandoned them—and fired one of the guns himself, then another; at last, unable to do anything else, he mounted his horse once more and returned to where he had left his men. The battery that inflicted the most damage on the French cavalry was the only one whose gunners, contrary to orders, remained with their weapons throughout the struggle instead of taking refuge in a nearby square. Captain Mercer had so little confidence in the young German recruits formed up in the squares closest to him ("the young sourkrout-squares") that he decided not to send his gunners to shelter in their midst. "To have sought refuge amongst men in such a state were madness—the very moment our men ran from their guns, I was convinced, would be the signal for their disbanding." Had Mercer's battery been posted on the forward slope, such a decision would have been impossible; but his guns were farther back, right in line with the squares, and protected by the high bank of the sunken road. The captain ordered his men to prime their pieces with double loads of shot and grapeshot, and they repulsed several charges of the Imperial Guard's
grenadiers a cheval,
eventually, there were so many dead horses in front of Mercer's guns that the enemy cavalry, even if they still wanted to, could no longer reach his position.
In two hours of incessant charging, the French cavalry regiments lost so many men and horses that their value as a striking force was gone. The twenty regiments that took part in the charges were led by a total of slightly more than 500 officers; of these, some 50-odd were killed at Waterloo, and about 250 were wounded, including one of two corps commanders, five of six division commanders, ten of twelve brigade commanders, and eleven of twenty colonels. In Napoleon's cavalry, senior officers commanded from the saddle, led all charges, saber in hand, and paid the same price as their men. To these human losses, which exceeded 50 percent, were added the even greater losses in horses. It seems reasonable, therefore, to conclude that by six in the evening no more than a quarter of the troopers from the Imperial Guard cavalry divisions and from the corps commanded by Milhaud and Kellermann were still mounted on their horses and capable of wielding their sabers—a level of loss that would have destroyed the cohesiveness and morale of any unit whatsoever, including the most battle-hardened, rendering it effectively useless.
Given the final result of the battle, the protracted action against the Allied infantry squares must surely be considered a fatal error that consumed Napoleon's powerful cavalry without achieving any concrete result. There is no doubt that the emperor had only an imperfect idea of the nature of Wellington's deployment, and that Marshal Ney and his generals continued to attack without ever questioning whether what they were doing had any genuine probability of success. But the real blunder lay in the failure of the French to engage the Imperial Guard infantry in support of the cavalry. In his memoirs, Napoleon maintained that this was in fact his intention, but that the cavalry attacked too soon, before the infantry could support it. Taking account of the emperor's habitually guarded and ambiguous language, this statement probably indicates that Napoleon, at the moment when he should have decided to send in his reserves, hesitated and ultimately refrained from doing so. In the culminating stages of the cavalry attacks, Ney sent a message to the emperor, asking for some infantry support, and Napoleon sent back a famous reply: "Infantry! And where do you expect me to find infantry? Do you want me to manufacture some?"
The Middle Guard and the Old Guard were in fact still available to the emperor at that moment; but with the Prussians threatening his flank, the doubts that had thus far stopped him from engaging his reserves had become still more persuasive. He could not have been certain that the forces he had detached to protect his right would be enough to stop the Prussian advance, and Napoleon could not afford to leave himself without reserves to face Bulow's attack, should the Prussian general's troops overrun Plancenoit and threaten to cut the main road behind La Belle Alliance. In addition, the Allied garrisons in Hougoumont and La Haye Sainte were still putting up resistance, and the emperor was even less disposed than before to send his last reserves into the abyss between those two strongholds; the capture of one or the other was an indispensable condition for his signaling the final advance. By this time, barely enough fresh troops for one last offensive thrust remained to Napoleon, and he had to make that thrust at the proper moment. On that sweltering afternoon, exhausted like everyone else from the effects of a virtually sleepless night and the enervating tensions of the day, and accustomed to believing that the Old Guard should be engaged only in the final stages of a battle, Napoleon hesitated. In the end he decided to wait, perhaps already feeling the uneasiness, the growing disquiet that would lead him before many days passed to convince himself that the cavalry attacks had been launched too soon, and that it was all Ney's fault if the premature maneuver had been executed without success.