Meanwhile the desire to express myself
grew. The few signs I used became less and less
adequate, and my failures to make myself understood
were invariably followed by outbursts of passion.
I felt as if invisible hands were holding me, and
I made frantic efforts to free myself. I struggled—not
that struggling helped matters, but the spirit of
resistance was strong within me; I generally broke
down in tears and physical exhaustion. If my
mother happened to be near I crept into her arms, too
miserable even to remember the cause of the tempest.
After awhile the need of some means of communication
became so urgent that these outbursts occurred daily,
sometimes hourly.
My parents were deeply grieved and
perplexed. We lived a long way from any school
for the blind or the deaf, and it seemed unlikely
that any one would come to such an out-of-the-way place
as Tuscumbia to teach a child who was both deaf and
blind. Indeed, my friends and relatives sometimes
doubted whether I could be taught. My mother’s
only ray of hope came from Dickens’s “American
Notes.” She had read his account of Laura
Bridgman, and remembered vaguely that she was deaf
and blind, yet had been educated. But she also
remembered with a hopeless pang that Dr. Howe, who
had discovered the way to teach the deaf and blind,
had been dead many years. His methods had probably
died with him; and if they had not, how was a little
girl in a far-off town in Alabama to receive the benefit
of them?
When I was about six years old, my
father heard of an eminent oculist in Baltimore, who
had been successful in many cases that had seemed
hopeless. My parents at once determined to take
me to Baltimore to see if anything could be done for
my eyes.
The journey, which I remember well
was very pleasant. I made friends with many people
on the train. One lady gave me a box of shells.
My father made holes in these so that I could string
them, and for a long time they kept me happy and contented.
The conductor, too, was kind. Often when he went
his rounds I clung to his coat tails while he collected
and punched the tickets. His punch, with which
he let me play, was a delightful toy. Curled up
in a corner of the seat I amused myself for hours making
funny little holes in bits of cardboard.
My aunt made me a big doll out of
towels. It was the most comical shapeless thing,
this improvised doll, with no nose, mouth, ears or
eyes—nothing that even the imagination of
a child could convert into a face. Curiously
enough, the absence of eyes struck me more than all
the other defects put together. I pointed this
out to everybody with provoking persistency, but no
one seemed equal to the task of providing the doll
with eyes. A bright idea, however, shot into
my mind, and the problem was solved. I tumbled
off the seat and searched under it until I found my
aunt’s cape, which was trimmed with large beads.
I pulled two beads off and indicated to her that I
wanted her to sew them on my doll. She raised
my hand to her eyes in a questioning way, and I nodded
energetically. The beads were sewed in the right
place and I could not contain myself for joy; but
immediately I lost all interest in the doll.
During the whole trip I did not have one fit of temper,
there were so many things to keep my mind and fingers
busy.
When we arrived in Baltimore, Dr.
Chisholm received us kindly: but he could do
nothing. He said, however, that I could be educated,
and advised my father to consult Dr. Alexander Graham
Bell of Washington, who would be able to give him information
about schools and teachers of deaf or blind children.
Acting on the doctor’s advice, we went immediately
to Washington to see Dr. Bell, my father with a sad
heart and many misgivings, I wholly unconscious of
his anguish, finding pleasure in the excitement of
moving from place to place. Child as I was, I
at once felt the tenderness and sympathy which endeared
Dr. Bell to so many hearts, as his wonderful achievements
enlist their admiration. He held me on his knee
while I examined his watch, and he made it strike
for me. He understood my signs, and I knew it
and loved him at once. But I did not dream that
that interview would be the door through which I should
pass from darkness into light, from isolation to friendship,
companionship, knowledge, love.
Dr. Bell advised my father to write
to Mr. Anagnos, director of the Perkins Institution
in Boston, the scene of Dr. Howe’s great labours
for the blind, and ask him if he had a teacher competent
to begin my education. This my father did at once,
and in a few weeks there came a kind letter from Mr.
Anagnos with the comforting assurance that a teacher
had been found. This was in the summer of 1886.
But Miss Sullivan did not arrive until the following
March.
Thus I came up out of Egypt and stood
before Sinai, and a power divine touched my spirit
and gave it sight, so that I beheld many wonders.
And from the sacred mountain I heard a voice which
said, “Knowledge is love and light and vision.”