| Ellis Paxson Oberholtzer - 1917 - 610 頁
...drivers were shouting. "No drones" were seen in this "hive." * There was "a never-ending throng of eager, excited and enterprising men, all bent on building and trading and swift fortunemaking." fl In November, 1865, the trade of the city, it was said, was thirty per cent greater than it had been... | |
| Dewey W. Grantham - 1967 - 414 頁
...reported Andrews: "The narrow and irregular and numerous streets are alive from morning till night . . . with a never-ending throng of pushing and crowding...show such a sight as clamors for observation here. . . . Men rush about the streets with little regard for comfort or pleasure, and yet find the days... | |
| Don Harrison Doyle - 1990 - 396 頁
...progress, came to be seen as a southern exception rather than an indigenous spearhead for a New South. "Chicago in her busiest days could scarcely show such a sight as clamors for observation here," Sidney Andrews exulted.52 "These people were taking lessons from Chicago," Whitelaw Reid concurred.... | |
| D. W. Meinig - 1986 - 484 頁
...marvellous rapidity” from ruin and devastation, the “streets alive from morning till night. . . with a never-ending throng of pushing and crowding...building and trading and swift fortune-making.” From this time on visitors usually commented on the anomalous “Northern” character of the place.... | |
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