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<h2> CHAPTER IX </h2>
<p>The next important event in my life was my visit to Boston, in May, 1888.
As if it were yesterday I remember the preparations, the departure with my
teacher and my mother, the journey, and finally the arrival in Boston. How
different this journey was from the one I had made to Baltimore two years
before! I was no longer a restless, excitable little creature, requiring
the attention of everybody on the train to keep me amused. I sat quietly
beside Miss Sullivan, taking in with eager interest all that she told me
about what she saw out of the car window: the beautiful Tennessee River,
the great cotton-fields, the hills and woods, and the crowds of laughing
negroes at the stations, who waved to the people on the train and brought
delicious candy and popcorn balls through the car. On the seat opposite me
sat my big rag doll, Nancy, in a new gingham dress and a beruffled
sunbonnet, looking at me out of two bead eyes. Sometimes, when I was not
absorbed in Miss Sullivan's descriptions, I remembered Nancy's existence
and took her up in my arms, but I generally calmed my conscience by making
myself believe that she was asleep.</p>
<p>As I shall not have occasion to refer to Nancy again, I wish to tell here
a sad experience she had soon after our arrival in Boston. She was covered
with dirt—the remains of mud pies I had compelled her to eat,
although she had never shown any special liking for them. The laundress at
the Perkins Institution secretly carried her off to give her a bath. This
was too much for poor Nancy. When I next saw her she was a formless heap
of cotton, which I should not have recognized at all except for the two
bead eyes which looked out at me reproachfully.</p>
<p>When the train at last pulled into the station at Boston it was as if a
beautiful fairy tale had come true. The "once upon a time" was now; the
"far-away country" was here.</p>
<p>We had scarcely arrived at the Perkins Institution for the Blind when I
began to make friends with the little blind children. It delighted me
inexpressibly to find that they knew the manual alphabet. What joy to talk
with other children in my own language! Until then I had been like a
foreigner speaking through an interpreter. In the school where Laura
Bridgman was taught I was in my own country. It took me some time to
appreciate the fact that my new friends were blind. I knew I could not
see; but it did not seem possible that all the eager, loving children who
gathered round me and joined heartily in my frolics were also blind. I
remember the surprise and the pain I felt as I noticed that they placed
their hands over mine when I talked to them and that they read books with
their fingers. Although I had been told this before, and although I
understood my own deprivations, yet I had thought vaguely that since they
could hear, they must have a sort of "second sight," and I was not
prepared to find one child and another and yet another deprived of the
same precious gift. But they were so happy and contented that I lost all
sense of pain in the pleasure of their companionship.</p>
<p>One day spent with the blind children made me feel thoroughly at home in
my new environment, and I looked eagerly from one pleasant experience to
another as the days flew swiftly by. I could not quite convince myself
that there was much world left, for I regarded Boston as the beginning and
the end of creation.</p>
<p>While we were in Boston we visited Bunker Hill, and there I had my first
lesson in history. The story of the brave men who had fought on the spot
where we stood excited me greatly. I climbed the monument, counting the
steps, and wondering as I went higher and yet higher if the soldiers had
climbed this great stairway and shot at the enemy on the ground below.</p>
<p>The next day we went to Plymouth by water. This was my first trip on the
ocean and my first voyage in a steamboat. How full of life and motion it
was! But the rumble of the machinery made me think it was thundering, and
I began to cry, because I feared if it rained we should not be able to
have our picnic out of doors. I was more interested, I think, in the great
rock on which the Pilgrims landed than in anything else in Plymouth. I
could touch it, and perhaps that made the coming of the Pilgrims and their
toils and great deeds seem more real to me. I have often held in my hand a
little model of the Plymouth Rock which a kind gentleman gave me at
Pilgrim Hall, and I have fingered its curves, the split in the centre and
the embossed figures "1620," and turned over in my mind all that I knew
about the wonderful story of the Pilgrims.</p>
<p>How my childish imagination glowed with the splendour of their enterprise!
I idealized them as the bravest and most generous men that ever sought a
home in a strange land. I thought they desired the freedom of their fellow
men as well as their own. I was keenly surprised and disappointed years
later to learn of their acts of persecution that make us tingle with
shame, even while we glory in the courage and energy that gave us our
"Country Beautiful."</p>
<p>Among the many friends I made in Boston were Mr. William Endicott and his
daughter. Their kindness to me was the seed from which many pleasant
memories have since grown. One day we visited their beautiful home at
Beverly Farms. I remember with delight how I went through their
rose-garden, how their dogs, big Leo and little curly-haired Fritz with
long ears, came to meet me, and how Nimrod, the swiftest of the horses,
poked his nose into my hands for a pat and a lump of sugar. I also
remember the beach, where for the first time I played in the sand. It was
hard, smooth sand, very different from the loose, sharp sand, mingled with
kelp and shells, at Brewster. Mr. Endicott told me about the great ships
that came sailing by from Boston, bound for Europe. I saw him many times
after that, and he was always a good friend to me; indeed, I was thinking
of him when I called Boston "the City of Kind Hearts."</p>
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