Page 564 - les-miserables
P. 564

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,[9] is in the collection of the Waterloo Mu-
         seum.
            [9] A heavy rifled gun.
            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.
            There were a dozen assaults. Ney had four horses killed
         under him. Half the cuirassiers remained on the plateau.
         This conflict lasted two hours.
            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 Ta-
         lavera and Badajoz. Wellington, three-quarters vanquished,
         admired heroically. He said in an undertone, ‘Sublime!’

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