Concord, Mass.
1900
May 11
(No 2)
  Pulpit Rock a Blackburnian Warbler was singing
in a hemlock and a Black-throated Blue & a
Magnolia Warbler flitting about among the shrubbery.
Yellow Palm Warblers are still here in small numbers
& I saw a belated Hermit Thrush.
  The Warblers kept very low down all day and
many of them were hopping about on the ground.
They were if possible more tame than was the
case yesterday.
Warblers keep
low down &
are very tame
  The Lincoln's Finch appeared early this
morning on the walk directly in front of the
cabin and was seen there at frequent intervals
during the day feeding busily on some millet seeds
and chasing off several Swamp Sparrows which
attempted to share in the feast. He was much
tamer than the bird who stayed so long
last year. Early in the forenoon he sang a 
number of times in low tones & almost exactly
like a Long-billed Marsh Wren using this
form of song alone. He was a rather dark-colored
bird with but little buffy on the neck.
Lincoln's 
Finch.
  The only arrivals noted to-day were the
Hummingbird, Lincoln's Finch & Black-billed Cuckoo.
68