Helen Keller

The Story of My Life

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  • Rajnikant Jainhas quoted7 years ago
    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.
  • Rajnikant Jainhas quoted7 years ago
    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.
  • Rajnikant Jainhas quoted7 years ago
    flowers which the darkness that followed could not wholly blot out.
  • Rajnikant Jainhas quoted7 years ago
    the day is ours, and what the day has shown."
  • Rajnikant Jainhas quoted7 years ago
    because the house and the surrounding trees and fences were covered with beautiful English ivy.
  • Rajnikant Jainhas quoted7 years ago
    trailing clematis, drooping jessamine, and some rare sweet flowers called butterfly lilies, because their fragile petals resemble butterflies’
  • Rajnikant Jainhas quoted7 years ago
    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.
  • Rajnikant Jainhas quoted7 years ago
    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.
  • Rajnikant Jainhas quoted7 years ago
    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.
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