Glendale-Lenox
Ther [Thermometer]   SAT. JULY 19, 1913 [Saturday, July 19, 1913]  Wea
Fine
Clear & just agreeably warm with
light westerly breeze. A perfect summer
day followed by a calm, cool
brilliantly moon-lighted night.
Worked in my room on Concord
bird notes until 1 P.M. when with
Mrs. French & Mr. Mayhew I started 
for Lenox to lunch at the Dixie's
beautiful place where Hawthorn
wrote "Tanglewood Tales" in a house
no longer extant. Besides Mr. & Mrs.
Dixie & her sister Miss Tappan we
met a Miss Myer, interested in birds.
Luncheon very elaborate & delicious.
Sat in garden afterwards, looking off
over The Bowl. Home by 5 P.M.
to work an hour or two longer.
3 Wood Thrushes singing gloriously
6-6.30. No Owls to-might.
[margin] At 10 P.M. heard Black bill Cuckoo [Black-billed Cuckoo]
evidently on wing in bright moonlight.
[?] wur-r-rou call [?] then called coo-coo coo once.[/margin]
Glendale
Ther [Thermometer]   SUN. JULY 20, 1913  Wea
Fine
Forenoon sunny & warm. Brief
thunder shower at 1.30 followed
by cloudiness terminating at 6.30
in a brilliant flood of sunshine
starting through a rent in the cloud
banks in the west.
  Spent forenoon in my room
writing letters, much of afternoon
on piazza reading. At 5.30 P.M.
five or six of us started for 
Stockbridge. Mr. Mayon & a young
man to take train for New York,
the Finches & I to call on Miss
Tuckerman. She received us in the 
parlor where tea was served. Afterward
we walked about her exceedingly
picturesque little place. "Rabbits" of some
kind had been [devastating?] it of late.
Home by 6.30. Wood Thrush concert
at its best there.