William Wirt Henry to Mary Jane Henry
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I have been sitting before my little fire for the last hour and thinking, Oh! so
good about you, how good [you] are, how much I love you, and
what a glorious good time we will have when I get home,
that it has made me almost homesick, and that makes me
vexed to think my papers do not get back so I can be on my way to you for I
cannot stand it much longer to be away from my darling
wife. Dr Hollman and the Corps Head Qrs have not got here yet from
Washington, and I must wait I suppose until they do come. Yesterday the Regiment
moved out to support the fifth Corps
towards the left, and I have
just heard they are out about eight miles. I did not go as I am excused by the
Surgeon from all hard duty, so am left here in camp with
all the sick lame and lazy one’s as a camp guard. I expect they will get back to
night, but perhaps not as I have heard very heavy firing all day in the
direction the fifth Corps have gone, and they may be have a big battle, which
will keep them until tomorrow. They have had a miserable time of it so far for
it commenced a little before dark last night to rain which soon turned into hail
and sleet, and continued all night, and this morning the ground was covered
about an inch deep with it – and I hear the boys had to lay out in all of it
with[out]fires – it must have been awful. I have not received a
mail yet and it must now be about twelve days I should
think since I heard from you, the last was dated Nov 23rd. I will wait until the
mail goes out this evening and see if I can tell you anymore news about the
fight.
As everWilliam
9 oclock P.M.
The Regiment have got in all right did not have a fight.
We move in the morning about one mile from here into “Fort Durham”.
Wm