On
A Marble Table In The Middle Of The Room Always Stands A Large
Pitcher Of Iced Water; And From This A Cold, Damp, Uninviting Air Is
Spread Through The Atmosphere Of The Ladies' Drawing-Room.
Below, on the ground floor, there is, in the first place, the huge
entrance hall, at the back of which, behind a bar, the great man of
the place keeps the keys and holds his court.
There are generally
seats around it, in which smokers sit - or men not smoking but
ruminating. Opening off from this are reading-rooms, smoking-rooms,
shaving-rooms, drinking-rooms, parlors for gentlemen in which
smoking is prohibited and which are generally as desolate as ladies'
sitting-rooms above. In those other more congenial chambers is
always gathered together a crowd apparently belonging in no way to
the hotel. It would seem that a great portion of an American Inn is
as open to the public as an Exchange or as the wayside of the
street. In the West, during the early months of this war, the
traveler would always see many soldiers among the crowd - not only
officers, but privates. They sit in public seats, silent but
apparently contented, sometimes for an hour together. All Americans
are given to gatherings such as these. It is the much-loved
institution to which the name of "loafing" has been given.
I do not like the mode of life which prevails in the American
hotels. I have come across exceptions, and know one or two that are
very comfortable - always excepting that matter of eating and
drinking.
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