At Waterloo Ney again commands the left…
June 1815 CE
At around 3:30 p.m., Ney orders a mass cavalry charge against the Anglo-Allied line.
Ney's cavalry overruns the enemy cannons but finsd the infantry formed in cavalry-proof square formations.
Ney, without infantry or artillery support, fails to break the squares.
The action will earn Ney criticism, and some will argue that it led to Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo.
Ney's cavalry also fail to spike enemy cannon (driving iron spikes into the firing holes) while they are under French control (during the cavalry attack, the crews of the cannon retreat into the squares for protection, then re-man their pieces as the horsemen withdraw).
Ney's cavalry carries the equipment needed to spike cannons, and spiking the cannons would probably have made them useless for the rest of the battle.
The loss of a large number of cannon would have weakened the army and could have caused the Anglo-Allied force to withdraw from the battle.
Ney is seen during one of the charges beating his sword against the side of a British cannon in furious frustration.
During the battle, he has five horses killed under him; and at the end of the day, Ney leads one of the last infantry charges.
It is as though Ney is seeking death, but death does not want him, as many observers will report.
The Anglo-Allied army, led by the Duke of Wellington and Blücher, stands fast against repeated French attacks, until with the aid of several Prussian corps that arrive on the east of the battlefield in the early evening they manage to rout the French Army.