In the summer of 1894, I attended
the meeting at Chautauqua of the American Association
to Promote the Teaching of Speech to the Deaf.
There it was arranged that I should go to the Wright-Humason
School for the Deaf in New York City. I went there
in October, 1894, accompanied by Miss Sullivan.
This school was chosen especially for the purpose
of obtaining the highest advantages in vocal culture
and training in lip-reading. In addition to my
work in these subjects, I studied, during the two
years I was in the school, arithmetic, physical geography,
French and German.
Miss Reamy, my German teacher, could
use the manual alphabet, and after I had acquired
a small vocabulary, we talked together in German whenever
we had a chance, and in a few months I could understand
almost everything she said. Before the end of
the first year I read “Wilhelm Tell” with
the greatest delight. Indeed, I think I made
more progress in German than in any of my other studies.
I found French much more difficult. I studied
it with Madame Olivier, a French lady who did not
know the manual alphabet, and who was obliged to give
her instruction orally. I could not read her
lips easily; so my progress was much slower than in
German. I managed, however, to read “Le
Medecin Malgre Lui” again. It was very
amusing but I did not like it nearly so well as “Wilhelm
Tell.”
My progress in lip-reading and speech
was not what my teachers and I had hoped and expected
it would be. It was my ambition to speak like
other people, and my teachers believed that this could
be accomplished; but, although we worked hard and faithfully,
yet we did not quite reach our goal. I suppose
we aimed too high, and disappointment was therefore
inevitable. I still regarded arithmetic as a
system of pitfalls. I hung about the dangerous
frontier of “guess,” avoiding with infinite
trouble to myself and others the broad valley of reason.
When I was not guessing, I was jumping at conclusions,
and this fault, in addition to my dullness, aggravated
my difficulties more than was right or necessary.
But although these disappointments
caused me great depression at times, I pursued my
other studies with unflagging interest, especially
physical geography. It was a joy to learn the
secrets of nature: how—in the picturesque
language of the Old Testament—the winds
are made to blow from the four corners of the heavens,
how the vapours ascend from the ends of the earth,
how rivers are cut out among the rocks, and mountains
overturned by the roots, and in what ways man may
overcome many forces mightier than himself. The
two years in New York were happy ones, and I look
back to them with genuine pleasure.
I remember especially the walks we
all took together every day in Central Park, the only
part of the city that was congenial to me. I
never lost a jot of my delight in this great park.
I loved to have it described every time I entered
it; for it was beautiful in all its aspects, and these
aspects were so many that it was beautiful in a different
way each day of the nine months I spent in New York.
In the spring we made excursions to
various places of interest. We sailed on the
Hudson River and wandered about on its green banks,
of which Bryant loved to sing. I liked the simple,
wild grandeur of the palisades. Among the places
I visited were West Point, Tarrytown, the home of
Washington Irving, where I walked through “Sleepy
Hollow.”
The teachers at the Wright-Humason
School were always planning how they might give the
pupils every advantage that those who hear enjoy—how
they might make much of few tendencies and passive
memories in the cases of the little ones—and
lead them out of the cramping circumstances in which
their lives were set.
Before I left New York, these bright
days were darkened by the greatest sorrow that I have
ever borne, except the death of my father. Mr.
John P. Spaulding, of Boston, died in February, 1896.
Only those who knew and loved him best can understand
what his friendship meant to me. He, who made
every one happy in a beautiful, unobtrusive way, was
most kind and tender to Miss Sullivan and me.
So long as we felt his loving presence and knew that
he took a watchful interest in our work, fraught with
so many difficulties, we could not be discouraged.
His going away left a vacancy in our lives that has
never been filled.