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[Page 95]

black coffee & cream served in th lounge. This is about the swankiest hotel in Salisbury, waiters get round with nicely polished brass trays carrying bills & change but as usual the necessary usual tip is necessary. 2d is the general tip under the plate.

The office  man was good enough to have us shown round the rooms upstairs. The place is a network of passages & each room has its name according to the historical personage who occupied it in days gone by. The upper rooms, many of them, contain a good deal of the original furniture especially the old early victorian square bedsteads with their corner posts covering & side curtains. Of course these are still used for the visitors but everything else is up to date, for instance I am writing this by the light of a pretty little shaded lamp on the table. The other people in the room are all sitting round the fire smoking including the ladies. Of course in England it is nothing unusual for the ladies to smoke & the practice is not looked upon as it is in Australia. The women also indulge in drinking to a very common extent & it seems very strange to see such "Americanised" Parisian practices going on amongst such conservatism. The reserved nature of the English

  

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