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- The weather cleared up as the morning advanced; and, though everything
- remained quiet at the moment, we were confident that the day would not
- pass off without an engagement, and, therefore, proceeded to put our
- arms in order, as, also, to get ourselves dried and made as comfortable
- as circumstances would permit.We made a fire against the wall of Sir
- Andrew Barnard's cottage, and boiled a huge camp-kettle full of tea,
- mixed up with a suitable quantity of milk and sugar, for breakfast; and,
- as it stood on the edge of the high-road, where all the big-wigs of the
- army had occasion to pass, in the early part of the morning, I believe
- almost every one of them, from the Duke downwards, claimed a cupful.
- About ten o'clock an unusual bustle was observable among the staff
- officers, and we soon after received an order to stand to our arms. The
- troops who had been stationed in our front during the night were then
- moved off to the right, and our division took up its fighting position.
-
- Our battalion stood on what was considered the left centre of the
- position. We had our right resting on the Brussels road, about a hundred
- yards in the rear of the farmhouse of La Haye Sainte, and our left
- extending behind a broken hedge, which ran along the ridge to our
- left.Immediately in our front, and divided from La Haye Sainte only by
- the great road, stood a small knoll, with a sand-hole in its furthest
- side, which we occupied as an advanced post, with three companies. The
- remainder of the division was formed in two lines; the first, consisting
- chiefly of light troops, behind the hedge, in continuation from the left
- of our battalion reserve, and the second, about a hundred yards in its
- rear. The guns were placed in the intervals between the brigades, two
- pieces were in the roadway on our right, and a rocket brigade in the
- centre.
-
- The road had been cut through the rising ground, and was about twenty or
- thirty feet deep where our right rested, and which, in a manner,
- separated us from all the troops beyond. The division, I believe, under
- General Alten, occupied the ground next to us, on the right.
-
- Shortly after we had taken up our ground, some columns, from the enemy's
- left, were seen in motion towards Hougoumont, and were soon warmly
- engaged with the right of our army. A cannon ball, too, came from the
- Lord knows where, for it was not fired at us, and took the head off our
- right-hand man. That part of their position, in our immediate front,
- next claimed our undivided attention. It had hitherto been looking
- suspiciously innocent, with scarcely a human being upon it; but
- innumerable black specks were now seen taking post at regular distances
- in its front, and recognising them as so many pieces of artillery, I
- knew, from experience, although nothing else was yet visible, that they
- were unerring symptoms of our not being destined to be idle spectators.
-
-