The
Greensborough Patriot
May 22,
1862
Page 3
For the Patriot.
Speculators and Extortioners.
Company F, Forty-Sixth Regiment N. C. T., }
Goldsborough, May 20, 1862 }
Mr. Editor:--As much is said in many
of the newspapers of the State on political subjects, with a great deal of
wrangling as to which political leader, and which aspirant to Gubernatorial
honors were first a Seccessionist, and which “held out unto the last for the
Union,” and as all this is not in the slightest degree calculated to benefit the
country, but on the contrary tends only to produce anarchy in our midst, and
eventually run the Southern Confederacy in the ground, grant your correspondent
a corner in your excellent sheet—(on account of whose consistent course
throughout this whole struggle, I take pleasure in saying it is a favorite with
all the troops in this encampment)—to submit a few remarks on a subject, which
to every soldier in camp and every patriot at home, is of far more important,
and deserves of course more attention from the press. I allude to that class of men (unfortunately
very abundant in our country) commonly called speculators, but more properly
they be termed traitors and villains, enemies to their country, who for a few
dimes would suck the very life-blood of the Confederate Government, and if they
expected to be embraced under the provision of the Conscript Act, would at
once, with outstretched arms, welcome to their homes the Yankees now on our
borders that they might take the oath of allegiance to Lincoln’s despotism in
order to save the plunder they have robbed from the poor and suffering families
of our brave and dauntless volunteers, many of whom have passed through a
year’s experience of military life, and on more than one bloody field, have
tasted gun powder, and with unshaken nerves dealt death-blows among the
unprincipled wretches who have invaded our soil.
The term “speculation,” in its
proper meaning, includes only the fair-dealing tradesman, in whatever branch of
business, who, with unaffected probity, buys and sells; but in its broad and
general acceptation, it refers to the extortioner, or, in just as appropriate
language, the thief, the robber, the man who would pillage the pockets of a
dying negro. It refers to him, who in a
time like this, would swindle an honest yeoman of blankets, a few yards of
homespun, or other articles demanded in the market, and in a sneaking way,
place thereon a price five times the original cost and value. It refers to merchants in Raleigh, (whose
names were they known to me should here be exposed,) who sell, or offer for
sale as I am credibly informed, shirts made of the coarsest fabrics, at prices
ranging from five to nine dollars, and who for the leaves of old musty blank
books, cut and folded down to the smallest size, they ask the outrageous sum of
two dollars per quire! With equal force,
too, it refers to the person who sells a chicken to the hungry soldier for a
dollar and fifty cents, and a dozen eggs for seventy-five cents.
That such thievishness is practiced
all over the country by many who have never been in the army, and further, who
never intent to be,--practised almost within cannon shot of the enemy who have
come to destroy them, and that too on the very men who at the call of their
country, generously came forth to defend all from ruin, that such is so, we
say, is a fact harrowing to the mind of the soldier; for what feelings may we
imagine disturb his thoughts while partaking of his dry, burnt crust, with his
unsavory dish of grease and fat bacon, when he reflects that there are at their
homes in ease and comfort, hundreds of such scoundrels as these, for whom they
endure these privations, and for whom at any moment they may be called upon to
sacrifice their lives, and thus bid adieu forever to their families.
Are we not engaged in a struggle in
which the dourest interests are involved that could prompt bold and courageous
men to action? And if defeated in this
struggle, who is so weak as not to clearly discern that our property will be
forever gone; for does not experience prove that there is no sympathy among
others for and within themselves no hope of resurrection for a conquered and
fallen people? Then is not ours a cause
which should make honest men of citizens pursuing the duties of their
respective avocations, as well as brave men of soldiers on the
battlefield? And should it not bring us
together shoulder to shoulder as countrymen who are countrymen, and brothers
who are brothers?
The pay of a soldier is eleven
dollars per month. How much money will our
brave volunteers, the majority of whom are poor men and without means, have in
their possession, should they ever get home, if this wholesale robbery of their
pay is allowed to continue?
This letter is written by one who
does not desire to achieve publicity to his name, but by an humble soldier who
volunteered in April, 1861, served till his term expired, and re-enlisted for
the war.
E. P. I.