March 9.
Thermometer at 2 P. M. 15°, sixteen inches of snow on a level in open fields, hard and dry, ice in Flint’s Pond two feet thick, and the aspect of the earth is that of the middle of January in a severe winter. Yet this is about the date that bluebirds arrive commonly.
A pail of water froze nearly half an inch thick in my chamber, with fire raked up.
The train which should have got down last night did not arrive till this afternoon (Sunday), having stuck in a drift.
H. D. Thoreau, Journal, March 9, 1856
This is about the date that bluebirds arrive commonly. See March 9, 1852 (" I hear and see bluebirds, come with the warm wind."); March 9, 1859 (" C. says that he heard and saw a bluebird on the 7th, and R. W. E. the same. This was the day on which they were generally observed."); March 10, 1852 ("I see flocks of a dozen bluebirds together."); March 10, 1853("What was that sound that came on the softened air? It was the warble of the first bluebird from that scraggy apple orchard yonder. When this is heard, then has spring arrived."); March 10, 1856 ("A bluebird would look as much out of place now as the 10th of January. . . .It is hard to believe the records of previous years") See also A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Signs of the Spring: Listening for the Bluebird
This is about the date that bluebirds arrive commonly. See March 9, 1852 (" I hear and see bluebirds, come with the warm wind."); March 9, 1859 (" C. says that he heard and saw a bluebird on the 7th, and R. W. E. the same. This was the day on which they were generally observed."); March 10, 1852 ("I see flocks of a dozen bluebirds together."); March 10, 1853("What was that sound that came on the softened air? It was the warble of the first bluebird from that scraggy apple orchard yonder. When this is heard, then has spring arrived."); March 10, 1856 ("A bluebird would look as much out of place now as the 10th of January. . . .It is hard to believe the records of previous years") See also A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Signs of the Spring: Listening for the Bluebird
The train . . . stuck in a drift. See February 17, 1856 ("Some three or four inches of snow fallen in the night and now blowing. At noon begins to snow again, as well as blow. Several more inches fall."); February 18, 1856 ("Yesterday’s snow drifting. No cars from above or below till 1 P.M.")
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