Cambridge, Mass.
1909. 
Nov. 28 [November 28, 1909]
  About the same time (4.20) this evening
as last I again heard the Carolina Wren
chattering just outside my study window and
looking out saw him perched on the top of
[the] stake scolding vociferously. He flew thence into
the rhododendrons, still scolding, and a moment 
later he took the same course as last night past
the window to the right. This time I was
able to follow him with my eyes sufficiently far
to make sure that he went up into the ivy
on the east wall of the Museum just over the
bulkead [bulkhead]. No doubt he roosts there in some crevices
among the vines as, I remember, the pair of
Carolina Wrens which frequented this garden in
the autumn of 1908 were in the habit of doing.
I searched the garden for this bird this morning without success.
Carolina Wren again in our garden
He goes to roost in vines on east wall of Museum