'The Story of My Life' was published in 1903.
[{"id":"para_1","index":0,"start":0,"offset":326,"words":5,"paraNum":"","lastModified":1665754010000,"semanticType":"title-book-title","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl31","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":1151000000,"end":1157000000},"paragraphVersion":255,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<h1 class=\"ilm-title\" id=\"para_1\" semantictype=\"title-book-title\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl31\" data-audio=\"1\" data-chapter=\"para_1\" data-words-count=\"5\" data-before=\"0\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">The Story of My Life</span></h1>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":true,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_2","index":1,"start":326,"offset":354,"words":2,"paraNum":"","lastModified":1669696891000,"semanticType":"title-author","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl32","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":1257000000,"end":1261000000},"paragraphVersion":260,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<h1 class=\"ilm-title ilm-author ilm-x-large ilm-nopad\" id=\"para_2\" semantictype=\"title-author\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl32\" data-audio=\"1\" data-chapter=\"para_2\" data-words-count=\"2\" data-before=\"5\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">by <br>Helen Keller</span></h1>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_3","index":2,"start":680,"offset":155,"words":0,"paraNum":"","lastModified":1663383995000,"semanticType":"line","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl33","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":1361000000,"end":1389000000},"paragraphVersion":250,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<hr class=\"ilm-hr ilm-small\" id=\"para_3\" semantictype=\"line\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl33\" data-words-count=\"0\" data-before=\"7\" data-ww=\"\">","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_4","index":3,"start":835,"offset":8619,"words":13,"paraNum":"","lastModified":1669806390000,"semanticType":"illustration","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl14v","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":1492333333,"end":1595666667},"paragraphVersion":31,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_4\" data-words-count=\"13\" class=\"ilm-illustration\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl14v\" ilm-block=\"\" ilm-display=\"\"><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\"><img width=\"404\" height=\"512\" data-src=\"ch0p0\" 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\" alt=\"Keller (left) with Anne Sullivan vacationing on Cape Cod in July 1888\">Keller (left) with Anne Sullivan vacationing on Cape Cod in July 1888 </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_5","index":4,"start":9454,"offset":696,"words":31,"paraNum":"","lastModified":1663385343000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"no_audio","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl36","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":1699000000,"end":1732000000},"paragraphVersion":263,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p class=\"ilm-blockquote\" id=\"para_5\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl36\" data-words-count=\"31\" data-before=\"20\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\"><i>To </i><i>ALEXANDER </i><i>GRAHAM </i><i>BELL</i><br><br> <i>Who </i><i>has </i><i>taught </i><i>the </i><i>deaf </i><i>to </i><i>speak</i><i><br> </i><i>and </i><i>enabled </i><i>the </i><i>listening </i><i>ear </i><i>to </i><i>hear </i><i>speech</i><i><br> </i><i>from </i><i>the </i><i>Atlantic </i><i>to </i><i>the </i><i>Rockies,</i><i><br> </i><i>I </i><i>dedicate </i><i>this </i><i>Story </i><i>of </i><i>My </i><i>Life.</i></span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_6","index":5,"start":10150,"offset":156,"words":0,"paraNum":"","lastModified":1663344431000,"semanticType":"line","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl37","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":1832000000,"end":1834000000},"paragraphVersion":242,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<hr class=\"ilm-hr ilm-small\" id=\"para_6\" semantictype=\"line\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl37\" data-words-count=\"0\" data-before=\"51\" data-ww=\"\">","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_7","index":6,"start":10306,"offset":514,"words":2,"paraNum":"","lastModified":1669659845000,"semanticType":"header-chapter-header","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3h","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":3200000000,"end":3203000000},"paragraphVersion":273,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<h2 class=\"ilm-header ilm-h2 ilm-large\" id=\"para_7\" semantictype=\"header-chapter-header\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3h\" data-audio=\"1\" data-chapter=\"para_7\" data-words-count=\"2\" data-before=\"51\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\"><span class=\"chapter-text\"><span class=\"chapter-number\"><span class=\"chapter-label\"></span><span class=\"chapter-value\"></span></span><span class=\"chapter-title\">Chapter I</span></span></span></h2>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_8","index":7,"start":10820,"offset":547,"words":48,"paraNum":"1.1.1","lastModified":1669660132000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3i","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":3303000000,"end":3351333333},"paragraphVersion":267,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_8\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3i\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"48\" data-before=\"53\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.1\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_9","index":8,"start":11367,"offset":633,"words":59,"paraNum":"1.1.2","lastModified":1665754482000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10q","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":3351666667,"end":3410333333},"paragraphVersion":191,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_9\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10q\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"59\" data-before=\"101\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.2\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.” </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_10","index":9,"start":12000,"offset":663,"words":63,"paraNum":"1.1.3","lastModified":1669644175000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10r","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":3410666667,"end":3474000000},"paragraphVersion":191,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_10\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10r\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"63\" data-before=\"160\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.3\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_11","index":10,"start":12663,"offset":379,"words":15,"paraNum":"1.1.4","lastModified":1665754719000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3j","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":3574000000,"end":3590000000},"paragraphVersion":265,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_11\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3j\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"15\" data-before=\"223\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.4\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">I was born on June 27, 1880, in Tuscumbia, a little town of northern Alabama.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_12","index":11,"start":13042,"offset":705,"words":76,"paraNum":"1.1.5","lastModified":1665754813000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3k","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":3690000000,"end":3767000000},"paragraphVersion":263,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_12\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3k\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"76\" data-before=\"238\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.5\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_13","index":12,"start":13747,"offset":664,"words":61,"paraNum":"1.1.6","lastModified":1665756107000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3l","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":3867000000,"end":3929000000},"paragraphVersion":263,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_13\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3l\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"61\" data-before=\"314\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.6\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_14","index":13,"start":14411,"offset":513,"words":33,"paraNum":"1.1.7","lastModified":1665756163000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3m","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":4029000000,"end":4063000000},"paragraphVersion":263,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_14\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3m\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"33\" data-before=\"375\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.7\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_15","index":14,"start":14924,"offset":555,"words":41,"paraNum":"1.1.8","lastModified":1665756414000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3n","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":4163000000,"end":4204333333},"paragraphVersion":266,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_15\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3n\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"41\" data-before=\"408\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.8\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_16","index":15,"start":15479,"offset":681,"words":64,"paraNum":"1.1.9","lastModified":1665756744000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10s","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":4204666667,"end":4269000000},"paragraphVersion":186,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_16\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10s\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"64\" data-before=\"449\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.9\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_17","index":16,"start":16160,"offset":585,"words":59,"paraNum":"1.1.10","lastModified":1669704309000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3o","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":4369000000,"end":4428333333},"paragraphVersion":279,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_17\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3o\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"59\" data-before=\"513\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.10\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_18","index":17,"start":16745,"offset":662,"words":65,"paraNum":"1.1.11","lastModified":1665757114000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10t","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":4428666667,"end":4494000000},"paragraphVersion":185,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_18\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10t\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"65\" data-before=\"572\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.11\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_19","index":18,"start":17407,"offset":577,"words":44,"paraNum":"1.1.12","lastModified":1665757163000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3p","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":4594000000,"end":4639000000},"paragraphVersion":268,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_19\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3p\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"44\" data-before=\"637\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.12\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_20","index":19,"start":17984,"offset":585,"words":56,"paraNum":"1.1.13","lastModified":1665757267000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3q","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":4739000000,"end":4795333333},"paragraphVersion":270,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_20\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3q\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"56\" data-before=\"681\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.13\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_21","index":20,"start":18569,"offset":591,"words":52,"paraNum":"1.1.14","lastModified":1665757331000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10u","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":4795666667,"end":4847333333},"paragraphVersion":189,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_21\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10u\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"52\" data-before=\"737\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.14\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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! </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_22","index":21,"start":19160,"offset":641,"words":51,"paraNum":"1.1.15","lastModified":1665757431000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10v","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":4847666667,"end":4898333333},"paragraphVersion":186,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_22\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10v\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"51\" data-before=\"789\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.15\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_23","index":22,"start":19801,"offset":587,"words":52,"paraNum":"1.1.16","lastModified":1665757671000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10w","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":4898666667,"end":4951000000},"paragraphVersion":186,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_23\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10w\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"52\" data-before=\"840\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.16\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_24","index":23,"start":20388,"offset":606,"words":60,"paraNum":"1.1.17","lastModified":1665757596000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3r","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":5051000000,"end":5111333333},"paragraphVersion":279,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_24\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3r\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"60\" data-before=\"892\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.17\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_25","index":24,"start":20994,"offset":584,"words":50,"paraNum":"1.1.18","lastModified":1665757734000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10x","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":5111666667,"end":5161333333},"paragraphVersion":186,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_25\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10x\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"50\" data-before=\"952\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.18\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_26","index":25,"start":21578,"offset":611,"words":61,"paraNum":"1.1.19","lastModified":1665757866000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10y","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":5161666667,"end":5223000000},"paragraphVersion":182,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_26\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10y\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"61\" data-before=\"1002\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.19\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_27","index":26,"start":22189,"offset":621,"words":55,"paraNum":"1.1.20","lastModified":1665757950000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3s","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":5323000000,"end":5378333333},"paragraphVersion":282,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_27\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3s\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"55\" data-before=\"1063\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.20\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_28","index":27,"start":22810,"offset":583,"words":52,"paraNum":"1.1.21","lastModified":1665758200000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10z","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":5378666667,"end":5431000000},"paragraphVersion":179,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_28\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl10z\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"52\" data-before=\"1118\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.21\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_29","index":28,"start":23393,"offset":681,"words":77,"paraNum":"1.1.22","lastModified":1665758354000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3t","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":5531000000,"end":5609000000},"paragraphVersion":280,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_29\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3t\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"77\" data-before=\"1170\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.22\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_30","index":29,"start":24074,"offset":545,"words":45,"paraNum":"1.1.23","lastModified":1665758423000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3u","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":5709000000,"end":5754333333},"paragraphVersion":282,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_30\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3u\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"45\" data-before=\"1247\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.23\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_31","index":30,"start":24619,"offset":767,"words":84,"paraNum":"1.1.24","lastModified":1665758632000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl110","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":5754666667,"end":5839000000},"paragraphVersion":177,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_31\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl110\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"84\" data-before=\"1292\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.24\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_32","index":31,"start":25386,"offset":685,"words":72,"paraNum":"1.1.25","lastModified":1665758881000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3v","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":5939000000,"end":6011333333},"paragraphVersion":290,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_32\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3v\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"72\" data-before=\"1376\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.25\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_33","index":32,"start":26071,"offset":597,"words":51,"paraNum":"1.1.26","lastModified":1665758781000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl111","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6011666667,"end":6062333333},"paragraphVersion":180,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_33\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl111\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"51\" data-before=\"1448\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.26\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_34","index":33,"start":26668,"offset":565,"words":48,"paraNum":"1.1.27","lastModified":1665758994000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl112","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6062666667,"end":6111000000},"paragraphVersion":176,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_34\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl112\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"48\" data-before=\"1499\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.1.27\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">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.”</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_35","index":34,"start":27233,"offset":159,"words":0,"paraNum":"","lastModified":1663384296000,"semanticType":"line","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-blz2","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6144333333,"end":6177666667},"paragraphVersion":247,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<hr class=\"ilm-hr ilm-small\" id=\"para_35\" semantictype=\"line\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-blz2\" data-words-count=\"0\" data-before=\"1547\" data-ww=\"\">","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_36","index":35,"start":27392,"offset":519,"words":2,"paraNum":"","lastModified":1669659855000,"semanticType":"header-chapter-header","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3w","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6211000000,"end":6214000000},"paragraphVersion":269,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<h2 class=\"ilm-header ilm-h2 ilm-large\" id=\"para_36\" semantictype=\"header-chapter-header\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3w\" data-audio=\"1\" data-chapter=\"para_36\" data-words-count=\"2\" data-before=\"1547\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\"><span class=\"chapter-text\"><span class=\"chapter-number\"><span class=\"chapter-label\"></span><span class=\"chapter-value\"></span></span><span class=\"chapter-title\">Chapter II</span></span></span></h2>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_37","index":36,"start":27911,"offset":582,"words":53,"paraNum":"1.2.1","lastModified":1665759175000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3x","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6314000000,"end":6367333333},"paragraphVersion":265,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_37\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3x\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"53\" data-before=\"1549\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.1\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">I cannot recall what happened during the first months after my illness. I only know that I sat in my mother’s lap or clung to her dress as she went about her household duties. My hands felt every object and observed every motion, and in this way I learned to know many things. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_38","index":37,"start":28493,"offset":593,"words":54,"paraNum":"1.2.2","lastModified":1665759391000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl113","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6367666667,"end":6421333333},"paragraphVersion":189,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_38\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl113\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"54\" data-before=\"1602\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.2\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">Soon I felt the need of some communication with others and began to make crude signs. A shake of the head meant “No” and a nod, “Yes,” a pull meant “Come” and a push, “Go.” Was it bread that I wanted? Then I would imitate the acts of cutting the slices and buttering them. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_39","index":38,"start":29086,"offset":689,"words":71,"paraNum":"1.2.3","lastModified":1665759497000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl114","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6421666667,"end":6493000000},"paragraphVersion":177,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_39\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl114\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"71\" data-before=\"1656\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.3\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">If I wanted my mother to make ice-cream for dinner I made the sign for working the freezer and shivered, indicating cold. My mother, moreover, succeeded in making me understand a good deal. I always knew when she wished me to bring her something, and I would run upstairs or anywhere else she indicated. Indeed, I owe to her loving wisdom all that was bright and good in my long night.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_40","index":39,"start":29775,"offset":617,"words":63,"paraNum":"1.2.4","lastModified":1665759748000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3y","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6593000000,"end":6813000000},"paragraphVersion":276,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_40\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3y\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"63\" data-before=\"1727\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.4\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">I understood a good deal of what was going on about me. At five I learned to fold and put away the clean clothes when they were brought in from the laundry, and I distinguished my own from the rest. I knew by the way my mother and aunt dressed when they were going out, and I invariably begged to go with them.<br></span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_41","index":40,"start":30392,"offset":610,"words":58,"paraNum":"1.2.5","lastModified":1665970024000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl115","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6656666667,"end":6714333333},"paragraphVersion":186,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_41\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl115\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"58\" data-before=\"1790\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.5\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">I was always sent for when there was company, and when the guests took their leave, I waved my hand to them, I think with a vague remembrance of the meaning of the gesture. One day some gentlemen called on my mother, and I felt the shutting of the front door and other sounds that indicated their arrival. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_42","index":41,"start":31002,"offset":531,"words":45,"paraNum":"1.2.6","lastModified":1665970110000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl116","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6714666667,"end":6759333333},"paragraphVersion":190,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_42\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl116\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"45\" data-before=\"1848\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.6\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">On a sudden thought I ran upstairs before any one could stop me, to put on my idea of a company dress. Standing before the mirror, as I had seen others do, I anointed mine head with oil and covered my face thickly with powder. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_43","index":42,"start":31533,"offset":573,"words":53,"paraNum":"1.2.7","lastModified":1665970173000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl117","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6759666667,"end":6813000000},"paragraphVersion":174,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_43\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl117\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"53\" data-before=\"1893\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.7\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">Then I pinned a veil over my head so that it covered my face and fell in folds down to my shoulders, and tied an enormous bustle round my small waist, so that it dangled behind, almost meeting the hem of my skirt. Thus attired I went down to help entertain the company.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_44","index":43,"start":32106,"offset":560,"words":51,"paraNum":"1.2.8","lastModified":1665970253000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3z","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6913000000,"end":6964333333},"paragraphVersion":278,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_44\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl3z\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"51\" data-before=\"1946\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.8\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">I do not remember when I first realized that I was different from other people; but I knew it before my teacher came to me. I had noticed that my mother and my friends did not use signs as I did when they wanted anything done, but talked with their mouths. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_45","index":44,"start":32666,"offset":566,"words":45,"paraNum":"1.2.9","lastModified":1665970308000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl118","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":6964666667,"end":7010000000},"paragraphVersion":173,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_45\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl118\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"45\" data-before=\"1997\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.9\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">Sometimes I stood between two persons who were conversing and touched their lips. I could not understand, and was vexed. I moved my lips and gesticulated frantically without result. This made me so angry at times that I kicked and screamed until I was exhausted.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_46","index":45,"start":33232,"offset":595,"words":59,"paraNum":"1.2.10","lastModified":1665970379000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl40","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":7110000000,"end":7170000000},"paragraphVersion":275,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_46\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl40\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"59\" data-before=\"2042\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.10\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">I think I knew when I was naughty, for I knew that it hurt Ella, my nurse, to kick her, and when my fit of temper was over I had a feeling akin to regret. But I cannot remember any instance in which this feeling prevented me from repeating the naughtiness when I failed to get what I wanted.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_47","index":46,"start":33827,"offset":576,"words":49,"paraNum":"1.2.11","lastModified":1665970470000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl41","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":7270000000,"end":7319333333},"paragraphVersion":277,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_47\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl41\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"49\" data-before=\"2101\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.11\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">In those days a little coloured girl, Martha Washington, the child of our cook, and Belle, an old setter, and a great hunter in her day, were my constant companions. Martha Washington understood my signs, and I seldom had any difficulty in making her do just as I wished. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_48","index":47,"start":34403,"offset":581,"words":51,"paraNum":"1.2.12","lastModified":1665970554000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl119","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":7319666667,"end":7370333333},"paragraphVersion":175,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_48\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl119\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"51\" data-before=\"2150\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.12\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">It pleased me to domineer over her, and she generally submitted to my tyranny rather than risk a hand-to-hand encounter. I was strong, active, indifferent to consequences. I knew my own mind well enough and always had my own way, even if I had to fight tooth and nail for it. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_49","index":48,"start":34984,"offset":597,"words":52,"paraNum":"1.2.13","lastModified":1665970639000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11a","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":7370666667,"end":7422333333},"paragraphVersion":174,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_49\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11a\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"52\" data-before=\"2201\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.13\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">We spent a great deal of time in the kitchen, kneading dough balls, helping make ice-cream, grinding coffee, quarreling over the cake-bowl, and feeding the hens and turkeys that swarmed about the kitchen steps. Many of them were so tame that they would eat from my hand and let me feel them. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_50","index":49,"start":35581,"offset":603,"words":55,"paraNum":"1.2.14","lastModified":1665970686000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11b","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":7422666667,"end":7478000000},"paragraphVersion":170,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_50\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11b\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"55\" data-before=\"2253\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.14\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">One big gobbler snatched a tomato from me one day and ran away with it. Inspired, perhaps, by Master Gobbler’s success, we carried off to the woodpile a cake which the cook had just frosted, and ate every bit of it. I was quite ill afterward, and I wonder if retribution also overtook the turkey.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_51","index":50,"start":36184,"offset":644,"words":62,"paraNum":"1.2.15","lastModified":1665970769000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl42","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":7578000000,"end":7640333333},"paragraphVersion":286,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_51\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl42\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"62\" data-before=\"2308\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.15\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">The guinea-fowl likes to hide her nest in out-of-the-way places, and it was one of my greatest delights to hunt for the eggs in the long grass. I could not tell Martha Washington when I wanted to go egg-hunting, but I would double my hands and put them on the ground, which meant something round in the grass, and Martha always understood. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_52","index":51,"start":36828,"offset":469,"words":31,"paraNum":"1.2.16","lastModified":1665970915000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11c","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":7640666667,"end":7672000000},"paragraphVersion":173,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_52\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11c\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"31\" data-before=\"2370\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.16\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">When we were fortunate enough to find a nest I never allowed her to carry the eggs home, making her understand by emphatic signs that she might fall and break them.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_53","index":52,"start":37297,"offset":621,"words":60,"paraNum":"1.2.17","lastModified":1665971009000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl43","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":7772000000,"end":7833000000},"paragraphVersion":283,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_53\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl43\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"60\" data-before=\"2401\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.17\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">The sheds where the corn was stored, the stable where the horses were kept, and the yard where the cows were milked morning and evening were unfailing sources of interest to Martha and me. The milkers would let me keep my hands on the cows while they milked, and I often got well switched by the cow for my curiosity.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_54","index":53,"start":37918,"offset":545,"words":47,"paraNum":"1.2.18","lastModified":1665971072000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl44","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":7933000000,"end":7980333333},"paragraphVersion":285,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_54\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl44\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"47\" data-before=\"2461\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.18\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">The making ready for Christmas was always a delight to me. Of course I did not know what it was all about, but I enjoyed the pleasant odours that filled the house and the tidbits that were given to Martha Washington and me to keep us quiet. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_55","index":54,"start":38463,"offset":669,"words":66,"paraNum":"1.2.19","lastModified":1665971163000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11d","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":7980666667,"end":8047000000},"paragraphVersion":170,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_55\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11d\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"66\" data-before=\"2508\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.19\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">We were sadly in the way, but that did not interfere with our pleasure in the least. They allowed us to grind the spices, pick over the raisins and lick the stirring spoons. I hung my stocking because the others did; I cannot remember, however, that the ceremony interested me especially, nor did my curiosity cause me to wake before daylight to look for my gifts.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_56","index":55,"start":39132,"offset":565,"words":46,"paraNum":"1.2.20","lastModified":1665971236000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl45","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":8147000000,"end":8193333333},"paragraphVersion":288,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_56\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl45\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"46\" data-before=\"2574\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.20\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">Martha Washington had as great a love of mischief as I. Two little children were seated on the veranda steps one hot July afternoon. One was black as ebony, with little bunches of fuzzy hair tied with shoestrings sticking out all over her head like corkscrews. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_57","index":56,"start":39697,"offset":733,"words":74,"paraNum":"1.2.21","lastModified":1665971319000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11e","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":8193666667,"end":8267333333},"paragraphVersion":170,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_57\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11e\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"74\" data-before=\"2620\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.21\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">The other was white, with long golden curls. One child was six years old, the other two or three years older. The younger child was blind — that was I — and the other was Martha Washington. We were busy cutting out paper dolls; but we soon wearied of this amusement, and after cutting up our shoestrings and clipping all the leaves off the honeysuckle that were within reach, I turned my attention to Martha’s corkscrews. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_58","index":57,"start":40430,"offset":526,"words":40,"paraNum":"1.2.22","lastModified":1665971393000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11f","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":8267666667,"end":8308000000},"paragraphVersion":166,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_58\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11f\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"40\" data-before=\"2694\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.22\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">She objected at first, but finally submitted. Thinking that turn and turn about is fair play, she seized the scissors and cut off one of my curls, and would have cut them all off but for my mother’s timely interference.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_59","index":58,"start":40956,"offset":620,"words":59,"paraNum":"1.2.23","lastModified":1665971519000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl46","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":8408000000,"end":8467333333},"paragraphVersion":297,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_59\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl46\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"59\" data-before=\"2734\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.23\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">Belle, our dog, my other companion, was old and lazy and liked to sleep by the open fire rather than to romp with me. I tried hard to teach her my sign language, but she was dull and inattentive. She sometimes started and quivered with excitement, then she became perfectly rigid, as dogs do when they point a bird. </span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false},{"id":"para_60","index":59,"start":41576,"offset":668,"words":70,"paraNum":"1.2.24","lastModified":1665971607000,"semanticType":"par","voicework":"audio_file","blockId":"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11g","language":"en","wordsRange":{"start":8467666667,"end":8538000000},"paragraphVersion":165,"direction":"ltr","paragraph":"<p id=\"para_60\" semantictype=\"par\" data-ilmid=\"the_story_of_my_life_ffa_en-bl11g\" data-audio=\"1\" data-words-count=\"70\" data-before=\"2793\" data-ww=\"\"><span class=\"block-num\" data-id=\"1.2.24\"></span><span class=\"block-pb\"> <span class=\"block-pb is-animated\"></span> </span><span class=\"itm-wrap\">I did not then know why Belle acted in this way; but I knew she was not doing as I wished. This vexed me and the lesson always ended in a one-sided boxing match. Belle would get up, stretch herself lazily, give one or two contemptuous sniffs, go to the opposite side of the hearth and lie down again, and I, wearied and disappointed, went off in search of Martha.</span></p>","hasContent":true,"isFirst":false,"isLast":false}]
by
Helen Keller
Keller (left) with Anne Sullivan vacationing on Cape Cod in July 1888
To ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL
Who has taught the deaf to speak
and enabled the listening ear to hear speech
from the Atlantic to the Rockies,
I dedicate this Story of My Life.
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.”
Chapter II
I cannot recall what happened during the first months after my illness. I only know that I sat in my mother’s lap or clung to her dress as she went about her household duties. My hands felt every object and observed every motion, and in this way I learned to know many things.
Soon I felt the need of some communication with others and began to make crude signs. A shake of the head meant “No” and a nod, “Yes,” a pull meant “Come” and a push, “Go.” Was it bread that I wanted? Then I would imitate the acts of cutting the slices and buttering them.
If I wanted my mother to make ice-cream for dinner I made the sign for working the freezer and shivered, indicating cold. My mother, moreover, succeeded in making me understand a good deal. I always knew when she wished me to bring her something, and I would run upstairs or anywhere else she indicated. Indeed, I owe to her loving wisdom all that was bright and good in my long night.
I understood a good deal of what was going on about me. At five I learned to fold and put away the clean clothes when they were brought in from the laundry, and I distinguished my own from the rest. I knew by the way my mother and aunt dressed when they were going out, and I invariably begged to go with them.
I was always sent for when there was company, and when the guests took their leave, I waved my hand to them, I think with a vague remembrance of the meaning of the gesture. One day some gentlemen called on my mother, and I felt the shutting of the front door and other sounds that indicated their arrival.
On a sudden thought I ran upstairs before any one could stop me, to put on my idea of a company dress. Standing before the mirror, as I had seen others do, I anointed mine head with oil and covered my face thickly with powder.
Then I pinned a veil over my head so that it covered my face and fell in folds down to my shoulders, and tied an enormous bustle round my small waist, so that it dangled behind, almost meeting the hem of my skirt. Thus attired I went down to help entertain the company.
I do not remember when I first realized that I was different from other people; but I knew it before my teacher came to me. I had noticed that my mother and my friends did not use signs as I did when they wanted anything done, but talked with their mouths.
Sometimes I stood between two persons who were conversing and touched their lips. I could not understand, and was vexed. I moved my lips and gesticulated frantically without result. This made me so angry at times that I kicked and screamed until I was exhausted.
I think I knew when I was naughty, for I knew that it hurt Ella, my nurse, to kick her, and when my fit of temper was over I had a feeling akin to regret. But I cannot remember any instance in which this feeling prevented me from repeating the naughtiness when I failed to get what I wanted.
In those days a little coloured girl, Martha Washington, the child of our cook, and Belle, an old setter, and a great hunter in her day, were my constant companions. Martha Washington understood my signs, and I seldom had any difficulty in making her do just as I wished.
It pleased me to domineer over her, and she generally submitted to my tyranny rather than risk a hand-to-hand encounter. I was strong, active, indifferent to consequences. I knew my own mind well enough and always had my own way, even if I had to fight tooth and nail for it.
We spent a great deal of time in the kitchen, kneading dough balls, helping make ice-cream, grinding coffee, quarreling over the cake-bowl, and feeding the hens and turkeys that swarmed about the kitchen steps. Many of them were so tame that they would eat from my hand and let me feel them.
One big gobbler snatched a tomato from me one day and ran away with it. Inspired, perhaps, by Master Gobbler’s success, we carried off to the woodpile a cake which the cook had just frosted, and ate every bit of it. I was quite ill afterward, and I wonder if retribution also overtook the turkey.
The guinea-fowl likes to hide her nest in out-of-the-way places, and it was one of my greatest delights to hunt for the eggs in the long grass. I could not tell Martha Washington when I wanted to go egg-hunting, but I would double my hands and put them on the ground, which meant something round in the grass, and Martha always understood.
When we were fortunate enough to find a nest I never allowed her to carry the eggs home, making her understand by emphatic signs that she might fall and break them.
The sheds where the corn was stored, the stable where the horses were kept, and the yard where the cows were milked morning and evening were unfailing sources of interest to Martha and me. The milkers would let me keep my hands on the cows while they milked, and I often got well switched by the cow for my curiosity.
The making ready for Christmas was always a delight to me. Of course I did not know what it was all about, but I enjoyed the pleasant odours that filled the house and the tidbits that were given to Martha Washington and me to keep us quiet.
We were sadly in the way, but that did not interfere with our pleasure in the least. They allowed us to grind the spices, pick over the raisins and lick the stirring spoons. I hung my stocking because the others did; I cannot remember, however, that the ceremony interested me especially, nor did my curiosity cause me to wake before daylight to look for my gifts.
Martha Washington had as great a love of mischief as I. Two little children were seated on the veranda steps one hot July afternoon. One was black as ebony, with little bunches of fuzzy hair tied with shoestrings sticking out all over her head like corkscrews.
The other was white, with long golden curls. One child was six years old, the other two or three years older. The younger child was blind — that was I — and the other was Martha Washington. We were busy cutting out paper dolls; but we soon wearied of this amusement, and after cutting up our shoestrings and clipping all the leaves off the honeysuckle that were within reach, I turned my attention to Martha’s corkscrews.
She objected at first, but finally submitted. Thinking that turn and turn about is fair play, she seized the scissors and cut off one of my curls, and would have cut them all off but for my mother’s timely interference.
Belle, our dog, my other companion, was old and lazy and liked to sleep by the open fire rather than to romp with me. I tried hard to teach her my sign language, but she was dull and inattentive. She sometimes started and quivered with excitement, then she became perfectly rigid, as dogs do when they point a bird.
I did not then know why Belle acted in this way; but I knew she was not doing as I wished. This vexed me and the lesson always ended in a one-sided boxing match. Belle would get up, stretch herself lazily, give one or two contemptuous sniffs, go to the opposite side of the hearth and lie down again, and I, wearied and disappointed, went off in search of Martha.
