Awake at sunrise - my dimmed memory of it is pink streaks.
Up at 8:00. To Doan-Brook Dam to sketch. A dense white haze morning; sun but a glow. Yellowing trees.
Wind-blown ripple-stars chopping the surface of Wade Park pond.
Great willows here.
Crow-caws.
Chicadees numerous.
Flock of sparrows splashing in the stream’s edge.
I cannot work where there is the sound of falling water. It takes my thoughts away far into unheard of spaces.
Only at long intervals do I actually hear the splattering of the water. When so, I cannot recall what I was thinking.
Dandelions. I often think the dandelion is the most beautiful flower there is. It is by far the most satisfying. Spring itself has not the fairyness + dreaminess of this morning.
P.M. Downtown. Woman’s suffrage day. Big parade. A fine sight. In a short time, what has actually existed for a long time (equality) will be admitted by men and granted.
A dense hazy afternoon.
Tall buildings blending by blue into sky.
Night – moon hazy - a large white ring.
I am another person now.
Already the things I have written in these books do not seem a vital part of me; the experiences of the summer just came but a dream from which I have waked, startled.
Charles E. Burchfield, Oct 3, 1914