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The time
is: 1630 hrs., 15 June 1815...The Imperial Guard light cavalry of Lefebvre-Desnottes
encountered the Nassau infantry of Bernhard, Duke of Saxe-Weimar. The
Duke had taken the initiative to move one of his two regiments south from
the vital crossroads of Quatre-Bras, in the rolling countryside of Flanders,
to delay the lead elements of the French advance. The French horsemen
found the village of Frasnes occupied by a regiment of 1500 Orange-Nassau
infantry. The Guard troopers began to ride around the town on both sides,
threatening a double envelopment. Observing this, the Nassauers started
to withdraw back up the road toward Waterloo.
The Guard
Chasseurs Regiment, 1100 men under the command of General Francois Lallemand,
pursued them off the road into the woods of Bossu, capturing 15 men.
At the same time, the 800 Lancers of the Guard continued straight for Quatre-Bras
itself. Their commander, General Colbert de la Chabanais, rode behind with a
small escort, into the walled-farm of Genioncourt.
By pre-arranged signal, the 2600 troops of the 2nd Nassau Regiment, who
remained in Quatre-Bras, set fire to a beacon and fired their 8 guns,
altering the rest of the Anglo-Allied army further up the road, toward
Waterloo. As the Lancers approached the crossroads, the two Nassau
regiments in the town and in the woods on their flank kept up a fire of
musketry which made it impossible for them to remain in their exposed
position on the open road.
Had the Lancers succeeded in hustling the Duke's Nassau troops from Quatre-Bras
as they had done in at Frasnes, the battle to be fought there the next day
would have been a defensive one for the French. No one suspected that on
such decisions hinged the last moments of glory for Napoleon and his
Grande Armee.

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