erm, are you sure this is what you want?
You said that you wanted a timestamp. The time command will certainly not give you that.
From man time
time - run programs and summarize system resource usage
An example of what you get when you use time is:
time perl -e 'print "hello world\n"'
hello world
real 0m0.006s
user 0m0.000s
sys 0m0.000s
Unless I seriously misunderstood your original question, then I doubt very much this is what you want.
Update: It just occurred to me that you're probably running this on Win32, in which case yes, you could use time. You probably want to add the /T switch.
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