Chapter XXIII
ve a personal touco ters to me by pricking ure in braille. I read from Mark ters is a tender Iliad of hy.
t of oteresting people I met in Neor of St. Nice Douglas iggin), t aut;Patsy.quot; I received from ts t le concurrence of t, books containing ts, soul-illumined letters, and pograp I love to t space to mention all my friends, and indeed t too sacred to set fort. It is ancy t I ton.
I sion only ttsburgen visited in . So make some one y and wise counsel eache years we have known her.
to ted. enterprises, and ies of all. Kind to every one, doing good, silent and unseen. Again I touc not mention; but I ionate interest o go to college.
t is t my friends ory of my life. In a turned my limitations into beautiful privileges, and enabled me to ion.
Part II. Letters(1887-1901) INtRODUCtION ters are important, not only as a supplementary story of as a demonstration of and expression--tself inguished.
tters are, merely remarkable as tions of a deaf and blind girl, to be read y; tters almost from t. t passages are talks about erms of . important, but most important are s of o tatues, t try sood in t. Bart tively fe all rying to be quot;like ot; and so soo often describes t as to as to one h eyes and ears.
One cause for tters is t number of trained o e. S different times in different parts of try, and so ed from most of ives. Of inguiso en, I t taneity--s it necessary to e o to a fe sympates imate frankness ;Little Jakey,quot