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nd Dispatch.from Camp Pickens. Camp Pickens, July 13th, 1861. While sitting in my tent this evening, listening to the dull, uninterrupted pattering of the rain, and thinking of the loved ones at home, a thought struck me that I might while a way the time faster by writing a few lines for your valuable paper. I have nothing particularly interesting to communicate, except that great confidence pervades the minds of all our troops that we can lick the hirelings of that arch-blend, Lincoln, no matter what the odds are against us. Our most ardent wish is for the order for an advance movement, and your correspondent would freely give three months' pay to receive such a command; but wiser heads than his govern our movements, and we are all willing, as far as we can, to bide our time until the hero of Fort Sumter leads us to battle and to victory. On Saturday we heard the report of nineteen cannon, fired in the direction of Fairfax C. H. Our regiment, (the 17th,) has ju
July 13th, 1861 AD (search for this): article 5
Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.from Camp Pickens. Camp Pickens, July 13th, 1861. While sitting in my tent this evening, listening to the dull, uninterrupted pattering of the rain, and thinking of the loved ones at home, a thought struck me that I might while a way the time faster by writing a few lines for your valuable paper. I have nothing particularly interesting to communicate, except that great confidence pervades the minds of all our troops that we can lick the hirelings of that arch-blend, Lincoln, no matter what the odds are against us. Our most ardent wish is for the order for an advance movement, and your correspondent would freely give three months' pay to receive such a command; but wiser heads than his govern our movements, and we are all willing, as far as we can, to bide our time until the hero of Fort Sumter leads us to battle and to victory. On Saturday we heard the report of nineteen cannon, fired in the direction of Fairfax C. H. Our