Cambridge.
Ther [Thermometer] Thursday, Feb. 19, 1914 [February 19, 1914] Wea [Weather]
Snow storm
  Snowing all day, thick & fast at
times, to a total depth of about 10 [inches].
Altogether there must be at least 15 [inches]
on a level now, including what
has come before & not melted. The
trees & wall loaded loaded & their trunks
plastered with it. It is exquisitely
clean & spotless about  our house.
  I saw the Thrasher in our lilacs
this forenoon. He looked disheveled &
dispirited & flew feebly, I thought.
No other birds appeared except a Jay
& a Crow.
  Spent forenoon revising sheets of
Long-eared Owl story as C. [Caroline Brewster] copied
them. Wrote three more pages for
Short-eared Owl story after luncheon.
C. tried her snow-shoes again this
morning tramping about through the Garden
& Jungle. She has gone this evening
with Mary Deane to see a play called
"The Mollusc" at Brattle Hall.

Cambridge
Ther [Thermometer] Friday, Feb. 20, 1914 [February 20, 1914] Wea [Weather]
Fair.
  Partly sunny, partly cloudy.
Not cold but chilly. According to
weather beaureau [weather bureau] report the snow
is 22 [inches] deep on the level at Blue Hills
to-day - deeper than at any time
since the winter of 1904-5.
  A Crow & a Blue Jay were the only
birds about our place to-day.
  Spent forenoon revising & rewriting
pages of Short-eared Owl story.
Added a page or more to it
after luncheon. Came into house
at 4.30 to help C. [Caroline Brewster] entertain a
lot of her friends - all ladies -
at afternoon tea. Upwards of
twenty came including most
of the members of the Reading Class
of former years but discontinued 
this winter.
  Almy got back from Naples last
night. I called to see him this
evening.