Cambridge
Ther [Thermometer]  SAT. JAN. 18, 1913 [Saturday, January 18, 1913]  Wea [Weather]
48 [48 degrees]      Dull.
Cloudy calm & warm with
heavy rain this evening.

  In the Garden saw a Chickadee
at the suet by my window & heard 
a Jay screaming & the White-throated
Sparrow chirping. Many House Sparrows there.

  Writing all day long as usual.
Finished with the Knot in a single
page and wrote 2 pp. [2 pages] on the Pectoral,
composing all the matter without 
using anything in journal or note
books. This spell of comparatively
uniform ability to write a little every
day seems to be really lasting.
  Lunched alone. C. [Caroline] & E. having gone
in town to 20th Century Club. "Billy", a
pretty story about a canary, read
aloud to me by E. this eve. C. read from
the Outlook.
Cambridge.
Ther [Thermometer]  SUN. JAN. 19. 1913 [Sunday, January 19, 1913]  Wea [Weather]
40 [40 degrees]   Superb
Perhaps the most perfect day of this
most wonderful winter, brilliantly clear
with crisp, dry air just pleasantly cool
- or warm. Yet the wind was north & strong.

  Hudsonian Tit in Garden at intervals
through day. At 4.30 P.M. I heard it
call sharply just outside my study
window & looking out saw it eating suet
greedily - for the first time. Also 
saw a Jay & heard a Downy [Downy Woodpecker] in Garden.

  To St. John's at 10:30 meeting C. there.
Beautiful music, fine sermon by
Dr. Hodges. Walked back with Mrs. Wyman,
Mary, Helen & Anna Almy, Margaret &
Miriam Gage, dined with C., E. & me.
Dick Allen, stricken with paralysis,
expected to arrive from [?], to night to
spend his remaining days at the Gages.
Wrote many letters to-day at odd times.