Page:The Surakarta (1913).djvu/104

Rh the utmost confusion. Baraka directed a Javanese to raise the shades.

The room appeared then as a more than commonly luxurious hotel room, eighteen feet by twenty, and furnished, except for the brass bed, in mahogany. It presented the unusual feature of having two blank walls. Being the end room of the suite, it had no connection at all with the hallway of the hotel. On the west side the wall was hung with several pictures; and on the north wall, which also was unbroken, there were pictures and a tapestry. The doorways, three in number, were all in the south wall. To the left of the entrance door, through which they looked, was another which plainly belonged to the clothes-closet; and to the right beyond the bed, which stood with its