Cambridge, Mass.
1902.
May 31
  Clear and cool with fresh E. wind.
  Went to Cambridge from Lancaster by the early morning 
train. Walking from the Museum Comp. Zoology to our
place I heard singing a Red-eyed Vireo near the Museum,
an Oriole on Chauncy Street, a Yellow Warbler on Concord Avenue,
a Least Flycatcher in the Parker place on Craigie Street (there
was one settled there last June) and a Warbling Vireo also
on the street last named.
  As I entered our garden I was greeted by the full,
ringing notes of a Wood Thrush issuing from the lilacs
near the cluster of large hemlocks. I afterwards heard this
bird at frequent intervals and once saw him. He was
as fine a singer as I have ever listened to and he made
the garden fairly sing with his glorious voice. Walter Dean
tells me that he has been there since the 29th. This is
the first Wood Thrush I have ever found in our garden but
one was noted there by Mrs Kettell a year or two ago,
and also in May if I remember rightly.
  There were also in the Garden to-day 2 Robins, the
pair of Cat birds, a pair of Redstarts, a male Yellow Warbler, a
pair of Red-eyed Vireos, a Chippy, a Golden Robin and
a King bird the last, I suspect, the same bird that
I noted there a week ago (on the 24th).
  The migration seems to have come to an end.
Indeed I think it closed early in the past week
for I have seen no northern birds since the 25th.
Close of spring migration
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