Cambridge.
Ther [Thermometer] Monday, Jan. 26, 1914 [January 26, 1914] Wea [Weather]
10 [degrees] Mrs. Thayer's funeral. Stormy
Cloudy with high snowfall in P. M.
Early morning cold. Temperature rising
through day.
  3 Chickadees at suet by my
window. No other birds seen or heard.
  Mrs. Thayer's funeral at house at 11 A.M.
The parlor and study crowded. C. [Caroline Brewster] went & I
intended to but gave it up at her
request because of my bronchial cough
which is still troublesome. I spent
most of day revising Bald Eagle story
most of the remaining sheets of which
were type- copied by C. who worked 
from 2 to 5.30 P.M. At 4 I
received a visit from C. W. Haley
who came to talk over matters at
Wolfeboro which seem to be going well.
He stayed with me about an hour.
Lizzy [Elizabeth R. Simmons] went with her family to Concord
by 1 P.M. train returning later.
She and C. read to me after dinner
Pierce & 3 men hunting moth nests
all day & finding only a few.
Cambridge.
Ther [Thermometer] Tuesday, Jan. 27, 1914 [January 27, 1914] Wea [Weather]
Dull.
Cloudy calm & mild, but chilly.
Trees attractively powdered by snow
that came last night - a mere dust of
it that mostly disappeared before noon
  Two or three Chickadees at suet, one
whistling phoe-bee full & clear every now
& then. A Crow flitting though the
lindens. Nothing else noted.
  Wrote letters up to 11 A.M. and then
began a Duck Hawk story, doing
the first page of it by luncheon time.
Tackled it again at 2 P.M. but
had to quit fifteen minutes later
because of neuralgic pain in my
right eye which had been coming on
all the morning & now became
simply intolerable. It wore off
gradually during the afternoon spent
in a darkened room with C. applying
various remedial things.
We spent the evening as usual,
reading aloud in front hall.