Page:Library Construction, Architecture, Fittings, and Furniture.djvu/271

Rh writing-room, and the similar portion at the other end is where a card-catalogue is kept for public use. The room is lit from the thirteen arched windows which face Copley Square and two

similar ones at the south end. These are with temporary wooden giilles of a conventional Roman pattern, as substitutes for bronze. At the north end there are no windows, but a broad panel, which Mr. J. A. M'Neill Whistler has been