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d the tenth Virginia, on our right, all abreast, charged bayonets up the height, and drove the enemy from the wood. When we reached the open field beyond, we opened upon their disordered and wavering ranks volleys of musketry. They turned and fled for their lives, throwing down their guns, knapsacks, and everything that would encumber their flight. The battle was fought and won. From that moment victory was ours. We drove the enemy from the field at every point. Immediately after the Battle, General Beauregard meeting with our gallant Colonel Elzey, (late a Captain in the U. S. A,) who commanded the 4th Brigade, said to him on the battle-field, 'Sir, you are the Brucher of the day, and have turned the tide of the battle.' On the same day, Col. Elzey was commissioned by President Davis Brigadier General." K. [Our correspondent appends an extract from a letter written by Captain Parker, a gallant young officer, bearing similar testimony. This was published yesterday.--Eps.]
verthrown the Constitution, not only in the South, but in the North. This the best publicists and reasoners of the country declare is no more than Franklin once asked in your contest with England and elsewhere than in Paris. Mr. Dudley Mann has had no difficulty in procuring material aid in the shape of money, arms of the most improved order, and cavalry and artillery experts of the highest stamp. From what I have personally seen and heard on this subject, I should not be surprised should Davis' Government loom up presently with a naval power that will astonish those who have been idle enough to suppose that the menaces of Mr. Seward in his dispatches and his envoys here would pass unnoted. In connection with the foregoing, we quote from the Washington correspondence of the Baltimore Sun: The London Times has arrived at the conclusion that the war must terminate in Southern independence. That independence may not, even if it exists de facto, terminate the war. It is cl