Chapter I
It is with a kind of fear that I begin
to write the history of my life. I have, as it
were, a superstitious hesitation in lifting the veil
that clings about my childhood like a golden mist.
The task of writing an autobiography is a difficult
one. When I try to classify my earliest impressions,
I find that fact and fancy look alike across the years
that link the past with the present. The woman
paints the child’s experiences in her own fantasy.
A few impressions stand out vividly from the first
years of my life; but “the shadows of the prison-house
are on the rest.” Besides, many of the
joys and sorrows of childhood have lost their poignancy;
and many incidents of vital importance in my early
education have been forgotten in the excitement of
great discoveries. In order, therefore, not to
be tedious I shall try to present in a series of sketches
only the episodes that seem to me to be the most interesting
and important.
I was born on June 27, 1880, in Tuscumbia,
a little town of northern Alabama.
The family on my father’s side
is descended from Caspar Keller, a native of Switzerland,
who settled in Maryland. One of my Swiss ancestors
was the first teacher of the deaf in Zurich and wrote
a book on the subject of their education—rather
a singular coincidence; though it is true that there
is no king who has not had a slave among his ancestors,
and no slave who has not had a king among his.
My grandfather, Caspar Keller’s
son, “entered” large tracts of land in
Alabama and finally settled there. I have been
told that once a year he went from Tuscumbia to Philadelphia
on horseback to purchase supplies for the plantation,
and my aunt has in her possession many of the letters
to his family, which give charming and vivid accounts
of these trips.
My Grandmother Keller was a daughter
of one of Lafayette’s aides, Alexander Moore,
and granddaughter of Alexander Spotswood, an early
Colonial Governor of Virginia. She was also second
cousin to Robert E. Lee.
My father, Arthur H. Keller, was a
captain in the Confederate Army, and my mother, Kate
Adams, was his second wife and many years younger.
Her grandfather, Benjamin Adams, married Susanna E.
Goodhue, and lived in Newbury, Massachusetts, for many
years. Their son, Charles Adams, was born in
Newburyport, Massachusetts, and moved to Helena, Arkansas.
When the Civil War broke out, he fought on the side
of the South and became a brigadier-general.
He married Lucy Helen Everett, who belonged to the
same family of Everetts as Edward Everett and Dr.
Edward Everett Hale. After the war was over the
family moved to Memphis, Tennessee.
I lived, up to the time of the illness
that deprived me of my sight and hearing, in a tiny
house consisting of a large square room and a small
one, in which the servant slept. It is a custom
in the South to build a small house near the homestead
as an annex to be used on occasion. Such a house
my father built after the Civil War, and when he married
my mother they went to live in it. It was completely
covered with vines, climbing roses and honeysuckles.
From the garden it looked like an arbour. The
little porch was hidden from view by a screen of yellow
roses and Southern smilax. It was the favourite
haunt of humming-birds and bees.
The Keller homestead, where the family
lived, was a few steps from our little rose-bower.
It was called “Ivy Green” because the
house and the surrounding trees and fences were covered
with beautiful English ivy. Its old-fashioned
garden was the paradise of my childhood.
Even in the days before my teacher
came, I used to feel along the square stiff boxwood
hedges, and, guided by the sense of smell would find
the first violets and lilies. There, too, after
a fit of temper, I went to find comfort and to hide
my hot face in the cool leaves and grass. What
joy it was to lose myself in that garden of flowers,
to wander happily from spot to spot, until, coming
suddenly upon a beautiful vine, I recognized it by
its leaves and blossoms, and knew it was the vine
which covered the tumble-down summer-house at the
farther end of the garden! Here, also, were trailing
clematis, drooping jessamine, and some rare sweet
flowers called butterfly lilies, because their fragile
petals resemble butterflies’ wings. But
the roses—they were loveliest of all.
Never have I found in the greenhouses of the North
such heart-satisfying roses as the climbing roses of
my southern home. They used to hang in long festoons
from our porch, filling the whole air with their fragrance,
untainted by any earthy smell; and in the early morning,
washed in the dew, they felt so soft, so pure, I could
not help wondering if they did not resemble the asphodels
of God’s garden.
The beginning of my life was simple
and much like every other little life. I came,
I saw, I conquered, as the first baby in the family
always does. There was the usual amount of discussion
as to a name for me. The first baby in the family
was not to be lightly named, every one was emphatic
about that. My father suggested the name of Mildred
Campbell, an ancestor whom he highly esteemed, and
he declined to take any further part in the discussion.
My mother solved the problem by giving it as her wish
that I should be called after her mother, whose maiden
name was Helen Everett. But in the excitement
of carrying me to church my father lost the name on
the way, very naturally, since it was one in which
he had declined to have a part. When the minister
asked him for it, he just remembered that it had been
decided to call me after my grandmother, and he gave
her name as Helen Adams.
I am told that while I was still in
long dresses I showed many signs of an eager, self-asserting
disposition. Everything that I saw other people
do I insisted upon imitating. At six months I
could pipe out “How d’ye,” and one
day I attracted every one’s attention by saying
“Tea, tea, tea” quite plainly. Even
after my illness I remembered one of the words I had
learned in these early months. It was the word
“water,” and I continued to make some
sound for that word after all other speech was lost.
I ceased making the sound “wah-wah” only
when I learned to spell the word.
They tell me I walked the day I was
a year old. My mother had just taken me out of
the bath-tub and was holding me in her lap, when I
was suddenly attracted by the flickering shadows of
leaves that danced in the sunlight on the smooth floor.
I slipped from my mother’s lap and almost ran
toward them. The impulse gone, I fell down and
cried for her to take me up in her arms.
These happy days did not last long.
One brief spring, musical with the song of robin and
mocking-bird, one summer rich in fruit and roses,
one autumn of gold and crimson sped by and left their
gifts at the feet of an eager, delighted child.
Then, in the dreary month of February, came the illness
which closed my eyes and ears and plunged me into
the unconsciousness of a new-born baby. They
called it acute congestion of the stomach and brain.
The doctor thought I could not live. Early one
morning, however, the fever left me as suddenly and
mysteriously as it had come. There was great
rejoicing in the family that morning, but no one,
not even the doctor, knew that I should never see or
hear again.
I fancy I still have confused recollections
of that illness. I especially remember the tenderness
with which my mother tried to soothe me in my waling
hours of fret and pain, and the agony and bewilderment
with which I awoke after a tossing half sleep, and
turned my eyes, so dry and hot, to the wall away from
the once-loved light, which came to me dim and yet
more dim each day. But, except for these fleeting
memories, if, indeed, they be memories, it all seems
very unreal, like a nightmare. Gradually I got
used to the silence and darkness that surrounded me
and forgot that it had ever been different, until
she came—my teacher—who was
to set my spirit free. But during the first nineteen
months of my life I had caught glimpses of broad, green
fields, a luminous sky, trees and flowers which the
darkness that followed could not wholly blot out.
If we have once seen, “the day is ours, and
what the day has shown.”