If you look at what happened with Underground Railroad, there is so much action. There is so much intrigue; there is so much of historical importance.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Many of the railroad evils were inherent in the situation; they were explained by the fact that both managers and public were dealing with a new agency whose laws they did not completely understand.
Underground people pay a desperate toll finding out things nobody else has discovered yet. We run around like headless chickens looking for the next cultural fix to spiral around in before it gets appropriated somewhere else and becomes something it never was. There's this sort of one-upmanship in the underground.
If people didn't read books on the subway, underground journeys would be dreary.
There are so many different reasons as to why I love riding trains. But I think ultimately it's the romantic feeling of it. There's something about it that just transports me into old films.
As a child I found railroad stations exciting, mysterious, and even beautiful, as indeed they often were.
I think one reason, obviously, that I spend so much time in one place is that I've been lucky enough to travel a lot, and now there are other different, invisible trains that are more interesting to me.
I don't think anything's underground anymore. And I think that's a good thing. Everything is up for grabs.
The rage for railroads is so great that many will be laid in parts where they will not pay.
What was once underground is now coming to the surface.
People's lives are in the care of the railways when they get on a train. The railways should remember that.
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