Helen Keller’s letters are important,
not only as a supplementary story of her life, but
as a demonstration of her growth in thought and expression—the
growth which in itself has made her distinguished.
These letters are, however, not merely
remarkable as the productions of a deaf and blind
girl, to be read with wonder and curiosity; they are
good letters almost from the first. The best
passages are those in which she talks about herself,
and gives her world in terms of her experience of
it. Her views on the precession of the equinoxes
are not important, but most important are her accounts
of what speech meant to her, of how she felt the statues,
the dogs, the chickens at the poultry show, and how
she stood in the aisle of St. Bartholomew’s
and felt the organ rumble. Those are passages
of which one would ask for more. The reason they
are comparatively few is that all her life she has
been trying to be “like other people,”
and so she too often describes things not as they
appear to her, but as they appear to one with eyes
and ears.
One cause for the excellence of her
letters is the great number of them. They are
the exercises which have trained her to write.
She has lived at different times in different parts
of the country, and so has been separated from most
of her friends and relatives. Of her friends,
many have been distinguished people, to whom—not
often, I think, at the sacrifice of spontaneity—she
has felt it necessary to write well. To them and
to a few friends with whom she is in closest sympathy
she writes with intimate frankness whatever she is
thinking about. Her naive retelling of a child’s
tale she has heard, like the story of “Little
Jakey,” which she rehearses for Dr. Holmes and
Bishop Brooks, is charming and her grave paraphrase
of the day’s lesson in geography or botany,
her parrot-like repetition of what she has heard, and
her conscious display of new words, are delightful
and instructive; for they show not only what she was
learning, but how, by putting it all into letters,
she made the new knowledge and the new words her own.
So these selections from Miss Keller’s
correspondence are made with two purposes—to
show her development and to preserve the most entertaining
and significant passages from several hundred letters.
Many of those written before 1892 were published in
the reports of the Perkins Institution for the Blind.
All letters up to that year are printed intact, for
it is legitimate to be interested in the degree of
skill the child showed in writing, even to details
of punctuation; so it is well to preserve a literal
integrity of reproduction. From the letters after
the year 1892 I have culled in the spirit of one making
an anthology, choosing the passages best in style
and most important from the point of view of biography.
Where I have been able to collate the original letters
I have preserved everything as Miss Keller wrote it,
punctuation, spelling, and all. I have done nothing
but select and cut.
The letters are arranged in chronological
order. One or two letters from Bishop Brooks,
Dr. Holmes, and Whittier are put immediately after
the letters to which they are replies. Except
for two or three important letters of 1901, these selections
cease with the year 1900. In that year Miss Keller
entered college. Now that she is a grown woman,
her mature letters should be judged like those of
any other person, and it seems best that no more of
her correspondence be published unless she should
become distinguished beyond the fact that she is the
only well-educated deaf and blind person in the world.