In The
Present Case They Were Occupied; But We Could Have Rooms Over The
Street, Which Were The Same As In The _Patio,_ And Which Were Perfectly
Quiet, As We Could Perceive From The Trolley-Cars Grinding And Squealing
Under Their Windows.
The manager (if that was the quality of the patient
and amiable old official who received us) seemed surprised
To see the
cars there, perhaps because they were so inaudible; but he said we could
have rooms in the annex, fronting on the adjoining plaza and siding on
an inoffensive avenue where there were absolutely no cars. The
interior, climbing to a lofty roof by a succession of galleries, was
hushed by four silent senoras, all in black, and seated in mute ceremony
around a table in chairs from which their little feet scarcely touched
the marble pavement. Their quiet confirmed the manager's assurance of a
pervading tranquillity, and though the only bath in the annex was
confessedly on the ground floor, and we were to be two floors above, the
affair was very simple: the chambermaid would always show us where the
bath was.
With misgiving, lost in a sense of our helplessness, we tried to think
that the avenue under us was then quieting down with the waning day; and
certainly it was not so noisy as the plaza, which, resounded with the
whips and quips of the cabmen, and gave no signs of quiescence.
Otherwise the annex was very pleasant, and we took the rooms shown us,
hoping the best and fearing the worst.
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