Cambridge.
Ther [Thermometer] Tuesday, Nov. 30, 1915 [November 30, 1915] Wea [Weather]
Fine
Clear & rather cool with light westerly wind.
  In Garden: 2 Chickadees, a Gold-crest [Golden-crested Wren],
2 White-throats [White-throated Sparrow], several House Sparrows.
  Spent day in and about Museum
supervising work on pigeon house &
the putting up of electric lamps to light
the walk from rear of house into garden
and to Museum.
  Mrs. Cobb & Lizzy Fuller called at 8 P.M.
After that E.R.S. [Elizabeth R. Simmons] read Trollope to me
until 9 when Harry Spelman came
bringing a deed that he had drafted
for the Lawrence land. It proved
faulty in respect to one detail so
he took it away & will send a revised
copy to me at Concord.

Cambridge - Concord.
Ther [Thermometer] Wednesday, Dec. 1, 1915 [December 1, 1915] Wea [Weather] 
Perfect.
  Brilliantly clear and almost
wholly windless. Frosty at morn &
eve, just bracingly cool through day.
  In Garden: At least one White-throat [White-throated Sparrow]
chirping and 2 Jays screaming.
  Concord Farm. 3-4 P.M. Six or eight
Tree Sparrows in orchard calling to
one another in pleasing chorus of
clear, tinkling voices. Brown Creeper
and Hairy Woodpecker heard near 
Pulpit Rock. Partridge flushed in
run.
  To Harvard Square at 9.30.
Dr. Andrews kept me two hours,
filling three teeth.
  Gilbert & I left house at 2 P.M. &
motored to Concord via Waverley
Belmont Spring & a new road leading
over picturesque wooded heights to
Lexington, thence by way of Bedford &
Carlisle Bridge. No tinge of green in
country fields. Reached Farm at 3.15.
Walked to Birch Field with Tim at sunset.