CHAPTER II.
ent print for tions, too many, indeed--Englis. Miss Keller reads t educated blind people kno it rouble if, as Miss Keller suggests, Englised. tted from etext] gives an idea of s look. Eacer (eitter or a special braille contraction) is a combination made by varying in place and number points in six possible positions. Miss Keller er on es letters to her blind friends.
t combinations at a stroke (as one plays a cor makes a cer at a time in a s of te about ypeer. Braille is especially useful in making single manuscript copies of books.
Books for ted in number. t a great deal to publis a large enougo make table to t titutions o pay for embossed books. Miss Keller is more fortunate t blind people in tlemen, like Mr. E. E. Allen of titute for truction of to print, as ions of books t she has needed.
Miss Keller does not as a rule read very fast, but sely, not so muc is one of s of mind to do terests o remember it for some future use, sters it off sly on t imes talks to -mindedly in t. he veranda, her hands go flying along beside her like a confusion of birds wings.
told, tactile memory as bot;in t; o spell a sentence in t impresses it on as many times and can call back
ts sound.
Like every deaf or blind person, Miss Keller depends on o an unusual degree. tle girl s neiginctive odours. As ellect greo ent sifies objects by to determine. to disrepute, and a deaf person is reluctant to speak of it. Miss Kellers acute sense of smell may accoun