A cool fresh blue windy morning. Most trees are again green & downy as in spring. A species of maple is badly rusted.
Hear powerful buoyant (sic) song of oriole. On McKinley hear fluctuating warble of yellowbird & again at noon.
Noon sultry & oppressively warm. At Meridian a thundershower breaks. Rain has that same snowy bubbly character - comes up the street in columns of mist. We stand on front porch.
All at once at (sic) flash of lightning & a crackle of thunder that whipped thru (sic) the length & breadth of the air - the cloud is sent! The terrific cloudburst that followed was on (sic) the most stirring sights I ever saw. Our eyes were dazed yet with lightning, our ears thrummed with thunder when the air became a snowy avalanche of rain – at moments all things were blotted out in the white air, again pawing grabbing trees showed dimly - snow streaked waving masses of whitish green.
Water torrented gutters almost met in the road.
Ceased almost as suddenly as it came. The air was so clear & fresh it snapped & even hurts our eyes. Fissures in the clouds were as blinding as the sun.
Maples leaning out over the creamy-foamed gutter-rill dropped water which formed bubbles, that were blown helter-sketer (sic) over the water in a very pretty fashion to annihilation at the shore.
Scent of patucalatum strong. Raindrops striking holes in cement walks emptied them.
Poison puff-balls abound in our lawn. Various kinds of toad-stools.
Very little change can be noted in town.
Wind sending ripple of white over a bending tree against a black thundercloud.
State of nature afternoon & evening one of exhaustion after the storm as a man after a free indulgence of his sexual passion.
Saw an English sparrow pursue a copper. Moon full at evening. Sky misty & soft, very light. Moon surrounded by same peculiar metallic greenish orange glow. Jupiter far in the lead tonight.
The crickets are pulsing strong tonight.
Charles E Burchfield, September 2, 1914