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<br/>
<h2> IN AID OF THE BLIND </h2>
<p>ADDRESS AT A PUBLIC MEETING OF THE NEW YORK ASSOCIATION FOR<br/>
PROMOTING THE INTERESTS OF THE BLIND AT THE WALDORF ASTORIA,<br/>
MARCH 29, 1906<br/></p>
<p>If you detect any awkwardness in my movements and infelicities in my
conduct I will offer the explanation that I never presided at a meeting of
any kind before in my life, and that I do find it out of my line. I
supposed I could do anything anybody else could, but I recognize that
experience helps, and I do feel the lack of that experience. I don’t feel
as graceful and easy as I ought to be in order to impress an audience. I
shall not pretend that I know how to umpire a meeting like this, and I
shall just take the humble place of the Essex band.</p>
<p>There was a great gathering in a small New England town, about twenty-five
years ago. I remember that circumstance because there was something that
happened at that time. It was a great occasion. They gathered in the
militia and orators and everybody from all the towns around. It was an
extraordinary occasion.</p>
<p>The little local paper threw itself into ecstasies of admiration and tried
to do itself proud from beginning to end. It praised the orators, the
militia, and all the bands that came from everywhere, and all this in
honest country newspaper detail, but the writer ran out of adjectives
toward the end. Having exhausted his whole magazine of praise and
glorification, he found he still had one band left over. He had to say
something about it, and he said: “The Essex band done the best it could.”</p>
<p>I am an Essex band on this occasion, and I am going to get through as well
as inexperience and good intentions will enable me. I have got all the
documents here necessary to instruct you in the objects and intentions of
this meeting and also of the association which has called the meeting. But
they are too voluminous. I could not pack those statistics into my head,
and I had to give it up. I shall have to just reduce all that mass of
statistics to a few salient facts. There are too many statistics and
figures for me. I never could do anything with figures, never had any
talent for mathematics, never accomplished anything in my efforts at that
rugged study, and to-day the only mathematics I know is multiplication,
and the minute I get away up in that, as soon as I reach nine times seven—</p>
<p>[Mr. Clemens lapsed into deep thought for a moment. He was trying to
figure out nine times seven, but it was a hopeless task, and he turned to
St. Clair McKelway, who sat near him. Mr. McKelway whispered the answer,
and the speaker resumed:]</p>
<p>I’ve got it now. It’s eighty-four. Well, I can get that far all right with
a little hesitation. After that I am uncertain, and I can’t manage a
statistic.</p>
<p>“This association for the—”</p>
<p>[Mr. Clemens was in another dilemma. Again he was obliged to turn to Mr.
McKelway.]</p>
<p>Oh yes, for promoting the interests of the blind. It’s a long name. If I
could I would write it out for you and let you take it home and study it,
but I don’t know how to spell it. And Mr. Carnegie is down in Virginia
somewhere. Well, anyway, the object of that association which has been
recently organized, five months ago, in fact, is in the hands of very,
very energetic, intelligent, and capable people, and they will push it to
success very surely, and all the more surely if you will give them a
little of your assistance out of your pockets.</p>
<p>The intention, the purpose, is to search out all the blind and find work
for them to do so that they may earn, their own bread. Now it is dismal
enough to be blind—it is dreary, dreary life at best, but it can be
largely ameliorated by finding something for these poor blind people to do
with their hands. The time passes so heavily that it is never day or night
with them, it is always night, and when they have to sit with folded hands
and with nothing to do to amuse or entertain or employ their minds, it is
drearier and drearier.</p>
<p>And then the knowledge they have that they must subsist on charity, and so
often reluctant charity, it would renew their lives if they could have
something to do with their hands and pass their time and at the same time
earn their bread, and know the sweetness of the bread which is the result
of the labor of one’s own hands. They need that cheer and pleasure. It is
the only way you can turn their night into day, to give them happy hearts,
the only thing you can put in the place of the blessed sun. That you can
do in the way I speak of.</p>
<p>Blind people generally who have seen the light know what it is to miss the
light. Those who have gone blind since they were twenty years old—their
lives are unendingly dreary. But they can be taught to use their hands and
to employ themselves at a great many industries. That association from
which this draws its birth in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has taught its
blind to make many things. They make them better than most people, and
more honest than people who have the use of their eyes. The goods they
make are readily salable. People like them. And so they are supporting
themselves, and it is a matter of cheer, cheer. They pass their time now
not too irksomely as they formerly did.</p>
<p>What this association needs and wants is $15,000. The figures are set
down, and what the money is for, and there is no graft in it or I would
not be here. And they hope to beguile that out of your pockets, and you
will find affixed to the programme an opportunity, that little blank which
you will fill out and promise so much money now or to-morrow or some time.
Then, there is another opportunity which is still better, and that is that
you shall subscribe an annual sum.</p>
<p>I have invented a good many useful things in my time, but never anything
better than that of getting money out of people who don’t want to part
with it. It is always for good objects, of course. This is the plan: When
you call upon a person to contribute to a great and good object, and you
think he should furnish about $1,000, he disappoints you as like as not.
Much the best way to work him to supply that thousand dollars is to split
it into parts and contribute, say a hundred dollars a year, or fifty, or
whatever the sum maybe. Let him contribute ten or twenty a year. He
doesn’t feel that, but he does feel it when you call upon him to
contribute a large amount. When you get used to it you would rather
contribute than borrow money.</p>
<p>I tried it in Helen Keller’s case. Mr. Hutton wrote me in 1896 or 1897
when I was in London and said: “The gentleman who has been so liberal in
taking care of Helen Keller has died without making provision for her in
his will, and now they don’t know what to do.” They were proposing to
raise a fund, and he thought $50,000 enough to furnish an income of $2400
or $2500 a year for the support of that wonderful girl and her wonderful
teacher, Miss Sullivan, now Mrs. Macy. I wrote to Mr. Hutton and said: “Go
on, get up your fund. It will be slow, but if you want quick work, I
propose this system,” the system I speak of, of asking people to
contribute such and such a sum from year to year and drop out whenever
they please, and he would find there wouldn’t be any difficulty, people
wouldn’t feel the burden of it. And he wrote back saying he had raised the
$2400 a year indefinitely by that system in a single afternoon. We would
like to do something just like that to-night. We will take as many checks
as you care to give. You can leave your donations in the big room outside.</p>
<p>I knew once what it was to be blind. I shall never forget that experience.
I have been as blind as anybody ever was for three or four hours, and the
sufferings that I endured and the mishaps and the accidents that are
burning in my memory make my sympathy rise when I feel for the blind and
always shall feel. I once went to Heidelberg on an excursion. I took a
clergyman along with me, the Rev. Joseph Twichell, of Hartford, who is
still among the living despite that fact. I always travel with clergymen
when I can. It is better for them, it is better for me. And any preacher
who goes out with me in stormy weather and without a lightning rod is a
good one. The Reverend Twichell is one of those people filled with
patience and endurance, two good ingredients for a man travelling with me,
so we got along very well together. In that old town they have not altered
a house nor built one in 1500 years. We went to the inn and they placed
Twichell and me in a most colossal bedroom, the largest I ever saw or
heard of. It was as big as this room.</p>
<p>I didn’t take much notice of the place. I didn’t really get my bearings. I
noticed Twichell got a German bed about two feet wide, the kind in which
you’ve got to lie on your edge, because there isn’t room to lie on your
back, and he was way down south in that big room, and I was way up north
at the other end of it, with a regular Sahara in between.</p>
<p>We went to bed. Twichell went to sleep, but then he had his conscience
loaded and it was easy for him to get to sleep. I couldn’t get to sleep.
It was one of those torturing kinds of lovely summer nights when you hear
various kinds of noises now and then. A mouse away off in the southwest.
You throw things at the mouse. That encourages the mouse. But I couldn’t
stand it, and about two o’clock I got up and thought I would give it up
and go out in the square where there was one of those tinkling fountains,
and sit on its brink and dream, full of romance.</p>
<p>I got out of bed, and I ought to have lit a candle, but I didn’t think of
it until it was too late. It was the darkest place that ever was. There
has never been darkness any thicker than that. It just lay in cakes.</p>
<p>I thought that before dressing I would accumulate my clothes. I pawed
around in the dark and found everything packed together on the floor
except one sock. I couldn’t get on the track of that sock. It might have
occurred to me that maybe it was in the wash. But I didn’t think of that.
I went excursioning on my hands and knees. Presently I thought, “I am
never going to find it; I’ll go back to bed again.” That is what I tried
to do during the next three hours. I had lost the bearings of that bed. I
was going in the wrong direction all the time. By-and-by I came in
collision with a chair and that encouraged me.</p>
<p>It seemed to me, as far as I could recollect, there was only a chair here
and there and yonder, five or six of them scattered over this territory,
and I thought maybe after I found that chair I might find the next one.
Well, I did. And I found another and another and another. I kept going
around on my hands and knees, having those sudden collisions, and finally
when I banged into another chair I almost lost my temper. And I raised up,
garbed as I was, not for public exhibition, right in front of a mirror
fifteen or sixteen feet high.</p>
<p>I hadn’t noticed the mirror; didn’t know it was there. And when I saw
myself in the mirror I was frightened out of my wits. I don’t allow any
ghosts to bite me, and I took up a chair and smashed at it. A million
pieces. Then I reflected. That’s the way I always do, and it’s
unprofitable unless a man has had much experience that way and has clear
judgment. And I had judgment, and I would have had to pay for that mirror
if I hadn’t recollected to say it was Twichell who broke it.</p>
<p>Then I got down, on my hands and knees and went on another exploring
expedition.</p>
<p>As far as I could remember there were six chairs in that Oklahoma, and one
table, a great big heavy table, not a good table to hit with your head
when rushing madly along. In the course of time I collided with
thirty-five chairs and tables enough to stock that dining-room out there.
It was a hospital for decayed furniture, and it was in a worse condition
when I got through with it. I went on and on, and at last got to a place
where I could feel my way up, and there was a shelf. I knew that wasn’t in
the middle of the room. Up to that time I was afraid I had gotten out of
the city.</p>
<p>I was very careful and pawed along that shelf, and there was a pitcher of
water about a foot high, and it was at the head of Twichell’s bed, but I
didn’t know it. I felt that pitcher going and I grabbed at it, but it
didn’t help any and came right down in Twichell’s face and nearly drowned
him. But it woke him up. I was grateful to have company on any terms. He
lit a match, and there I was, way down south when I ought to have been
back up yonder. My bed was out of sight it was so far away. You needed a
telescope to find it. Twichell comforted me and I scrubbed him off and we
got sociable.</p>
<p>But that night wasn’t wasted. I had my pedometer on my leg. Twichell and I
were in a pedometer match. Twichell had longer legs than I. The only way I
could keep up was to wear my pedometer to bed. I always walk in my sleep,
and on this occasion I gained sixteen miles on him. After all, I never
found that sock. I never have seen it from that day to this. But that
adventure taught me what it is to be blind. That was one of the most
serious occasions of my whole life, yet I never can speak of it without
somebody thinking it isn’t serious. You try it and see how serious it is
to be as the blind are and I was that night.</p>
<p>[Mr. Clemens read several letters of regret. He then introduced Joseph H.
Choate, saying:]</p>
<p>It is now my privilege to present to you Mr. Choate. I don’t have to
really introduce him. I don’t have to praise him, or to flatter him. I
could say truly that in the forty-seven years I have been familiarly
acquainted with him he has always been the handsomest man America has ever
produced. And I hope and believe he will hold the belt forty-five years
more. He has served his country ably, faithfully, and brilliantly. He
stands at the summit, at the very top in the esteem and regard of his
countrymen, and if I could say one word which would lift him any higher in
his countrymen’s esteem and affection, I would say that word whether it
was true or not.</p>
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