<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXIII </h2>
<p>Would that I could enrich this sketch with the names of all those who have
ministered to my happiness! Some of them would be found written in our
literature and dear to the hearts of many, while others would be wholly
unknown to most of my readers. But their influence, though it escapes
fame, shall live immortal in the lives that have been sweetened and
ennobled by it. Those are red-letter days in our lives when we meet people
who thrill us like a fine poem, people whose handshake is brimful of
unspoken sympathy, and whose sweet, rich natures impart to our eager,
impatient spirits a wonderful restfulness which, in its essence, is
divine. The perplexities, irritations and worries that have absorbed us
pass like unpleasant dreams, and we wake to see with new eyes and hear
with new ears the beauty and harmony of God's real world. The solemn
nothings that fill our everyday life blossom suddenly into bright
possibilities. In a word, while such friends are near us we feel that all
is well. Perhaps we never saw them before, and they may never cross our
life's path again; but the influence of their calm, mellow natures is a
libation poured upon our discontent, and we feel its healing touch, as the
ocean feels the mountain stream freshening its brine.</p>
<p>I have often been asked, "Do not people bore you?" I do not understand
quite what that means. I suppose the calls of the stupid and curious,
especially of newspaper reporters, are always inopportune. I also dislike
people who try to talk down to my understanding. They are like people who
when walking with you try to shorten their steps to suit yours; the
hypocrisy in both cases is equally exasperating.</p>
<p>The hands of those I meet are dumbly eloquent to me. The touch of some
hands is an impertinence. I have met people so empty of joy, that when I
clasped their frosty finger tips, it seemed as if I were shaking hands
with a northeast storm. Others there are whose hands have sunbeams in
them, so that their grasp warms my heart. It may be only the clinging
touch of a child's hand; but there is as much potential sunshine in it for
me as there is in a loving glance for others. A hearty handshake or a
friendly letter gives me genuine pleasure.</p>
<p>I have many far-off friends whom I have never seen. Indeed they are so
many that I have often been unable to reply to their letters; but I wish
to say here that I am always grateful for their kind words, however
insufficiently I acknowledge them.</p>
<p>I count it one of the sweetest privileges of my life to have known and
conversed with many men of genius. Only those who knew Bishop Brooks can
appreciate the joy his friendship was to those who possessed it. As a
child I loved to sit on his knee and clasp his great hand with one of
mine, while Miss Sullivan spelled into the other his beautiful words about
God and the spiritual world. I heard him with a child's wonder and
delight. My spirit could not reach up to his, but he gave me a real sense
of joy in life, and I never left him without carrying away a fine thought
that grew in beauty and depth of meaning as I grew. Once, when I was
puzzled to know why there were so many religions, he said: "There is one
universal religion, Helen—the religion of love. Love your Heavenly
Father with your whole heart and soul, love every child of God as much as
ever you can, and remember that the possibilities of good are greater than
the possibilities of evil; and you have the key to Heaven." And his life
was a happy illustration of this great truth. In his noble soul love and
widest knowledge were blended with faith that had become insight. He saw</p>
<p>God in all that liberates and lifts,<br/>
In all that humbles, sweetens and consoles.<br/></p>
<p>Bishop Brooks taught me no special creed or dogma; but he impressed upon
my mind two great ideas—the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of
man, and made me feel that these truths underlie all creeds and forms of
worship. God is love, God is our Father, we are His children; therefore
the darkest clouds will break and though right be worsted, wrong shall not
triumph.</p>
<p>I am too happy in this world to think much about the future, except to
remember that I have cherished friends awaiting me there in God's
beautiful Somewhere. In spite of the lapse of years, they seem so close to
me that I should not think it strange if at any moment they should clasp
my hand and speak words of endearment as they used to before they went
away.</p>
<p>Since Bishop Brooks died I have read the Bible through; also some
philosophical works on religion, among them Swedenborg's "Heaven and Hell"
and Drummond's "Ascent of Man," and I have found no creed or system more
soul-satisfying than Bishop Brooks's creed of love. I knew Mr. Henry
Drummond, and the memory of his strong, warm hand-clasp is like a
benediction. He was the most sympathetic of companions. He knew so much
and was so genial that it was impossible to feel dull in his presence.</p>
<p>I remember well the first time I saw Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes. He had
invited Miss Sullivan and me to call on him one Sunday afternoon. It was
early in the spring, just after I had learned to speak. We were shown at
once to his library where we found him seated in a big armchair by an open
fire which glowed and crackled on the hearth, thinking, he said, of other
days.</p>
<p>"And listening to the murmur of the River Charles," I suggested.</p>
<p>"Yes," he replied, "the Charles has many dear associations for me." There
was an odour of print and leather in the room which told me that it was
full of books, and I stretched out my hand instinctively to find them. My
fingers lighted upon a beautiful volume of Tennyson's poems, and when Miss
Sullivan told me what it was I began to recite:</p>
<p>Break, break, break On thy cold gray stones, O sea!</p>
<p>But I stopped suddenly. I felt tears on my hand. I had made my beloved
poet weep, and I was greatly distressed. He made me sit in his armchair,
while he brought different interesting things for me to examine, and at
his request I recited "The Chambered Nautilus," which was then my favorite
poem. After that I saw Dr. Holmes many times and learned to love the man
as well as the poet.</p>
<p>One beautiful summer day, not long after my meeting with Dr. Holmes, Miss
Sullivan and I visited Whittier in his quiet home on the Merrimac. His
gentle courtesy and quaint speech won my heart. He had a book of his poems
in raised print from which I read "In School Days." He was delighted that
I could pronounce the words so well, and said that he had no difficulty in
understanding me. Then I asked many questions about the poem, and read his
answers by placing my fingers on his lips. He said he was the little boy
in the poem, and that the girl's name was Sally, and more which I have
forgotten. I also recited "Laus Deo," and as I spoke the concluding
verses, he placed in my hands a statue of a slave from whose crouching
figure the fetters were falling, even as they fell from Peter's limbs when
the angel led him forth out of prison. Afterward we went into his study,
and he wrote his autograph for my teacher ["With great admiration of thy
noble work in releasing from bondage the mind of thy dear pupil, I am
truly thy friend. john J. Whittier."] and expressed his admiration of her
work, saying to me, "She is thy spiritual liberator." Then he led me to
the gate and kissed me tenderly on my forehead. I promised to visit him
again the following summer, but he died before the promise was fulfilled.</p>
<p>Dr. Edward Everett Hale is one of my very oldest friends. I have known him
since I was eight, and my love for him has increased with my years. His
wise, tender sympathy has been the support of Miss Sullivan and me in
times of trial and sorrow, and his strong hand has helped us over many
rough places; and what he has done for us he has done for thousands of
those who have difficult tasks to accomplish. He has filled the old skins
of dogma with the new wine of love, and shown men what it is to believe,
live and be free. What he has taught we have seen beautifully expressed in
his own life—love of country, kindness to the least of his brethren,
and a sincere desire to live upward and onward. He has been a prophet and
an inspirer of men, and a mighty doer of the Word, the friend of all his
race—God bless him!</p>
<p>I have already written of my first meeting with Dr. Alexander Graham Bell.
Since then I have spent many happy days with him at Washington and at his
beautiful home in the heart of Cape Breton Island, near Baddeck, the
village made famous by Charles Dudley Warner's book. Here in Dr. Bell's
laboratory, or in the fields on the shore of the great Bras d'Or, I have
spent many delightful hours listening to what he had to tell me about his
experiments, and helping him fly kites by means of which he expects to
discover the laws that shall govern the future air-ship. Dr. Bell is
proficient in many fields of science, and has the art of making every
subject he touches interesting, even the most abstruse theories. He makes
you feel that if you only had a little more time, you, too, might be an
inventor. He has a humorous and poetic side, too. His dominating passion
is his love for children. He is never quite so happy as when he has a
little deaf child in his arms. His labours in behalf of the deaf will live
on and bless generations of children yet to come; and we love him alike
for what he himself has achieved and for what he has evoked from others.</p>
<p>During the two years I spent in New York I had many opportunities to talk
with distinguished people whose names I had often heard, but whom I had
never expected to meet. Most of them I met first in the house of my good
friend, Mr. Laurence Hutton. It was a great privilege to visit him and
dear Mrs. Hutton in their lovely home, and see their library and read the
beautiful sentiments and bright thoughts gifted friends had written for
them. It has been truly said that Mr. Hutton has the faculty of bringing
out in every one the best thoughts and kindest sentiments. One does not
need to read "A Boy I Knew" to understand him—the most generous,
sweet-natured boy I ever knew, a good friend in all sorts of weather, who
traces the footprints of love in the life of dogs as well as in that of
his fellowmen.</p>
<p>Mrs. Hutton is a true and tried friend. Much that I hold sweetest, much
that I hold most precious, I owe to her. She has oftenest advised and
helped me in my progress through college. When I find my work particularly
difficult and discouraging, she writes me letters that make me feel glad
and brave; for she is one of those from whom we learn that one painful
duty fulfilled makes the next plainer and easier.</p>
<p>Mr. Hutton introduced me to many of his literary friends, greatest of whom
are Mr. William Dean Howells and Mark Twain. I also met Mr. Richard Watson
Gilder and Mr. Edmund Clarence Stedman. I also knew Mr. Charles Dudley
Warner, the most delightful of story-tellers and the most beloved friend,
whose sympathy was so broad that it may be truly said of him, he loved all
living things and his neighbour as himself. Once Mr. Warner brought to see
me the dear poet of the woodlands—Mr. John Burroughs. They were all
gentle and sympathetic and I felt the charm of their manner as much as I
had felt the brilliancy of their essays and poems. I could not keep pace
with all these literary folk as they glanced from subject to subject and
entered into deep dispute, or made conversation sparkle with epigrams and
happy witticisms. I was like little Ascanius, who followed with unequal
steps the heroic strides of Aeneas on his march toward mighty destinies.
But they spoke many gracious words to me. Mr. Gilder told me about his
moonlight journeys across the vast desert to the Pyramids, and in a letter
he wrote me he made his mark under his signature deep in the paper so that
I could feel it. This reminds me that Dr. Hale used to give a personal
touch to his letters to me by pricking his signature in braille. I read
from Mark Twain's lips one or two of his good stories. He has his own way
of thinking, saying and doing everything. I feel the twinkle of his eye in
his handshake. Even while he utters his cynical wisdom in an indescribably
droll voice, he makes you feel that his heart is a tender Iliad of human
sympathy.</p>
<p>There are a host of other interesting people I met in New York: Mrs. Mary
Mapes Dodge, the beloved editor of St. Nicholas, and Mrs. Riggs (Kate
Douglas Wiggin), the sweet author of "Patsy." I received from them gifts
that have the gentle concurrence of the heart, books containing their own
thoughts, soul-illumined letters, and photographs that I love to have
described again and again. But there is not space to mention all my
friends, and indeed there are things about them hidden behind the wings of
cherubim, things too sacred to set forth in cold print. It is with
hesitancy that I have spoken even of Mrs. Laurence Hutton.</p>
<p>I shall mention only two other friends. One is Mrs. William Thaw, of
Pittsburgh, whom I have often visited in her home, Lyndhurst. She is
always doing something to make some one happy, and her generosity and wise
counsel have never failed my teacher and me in all the years we have known
her.</p>
<p>To the other friend I am also deeply indebted. He is well known for the
powerful hand with which he guides vast enterprises, and his wonderful
abilities have gained for him the respect of all. Kind to every one, he
goes about doing good, silent and unseen. Again I touch upon the circle of
honoured names I must not mention; but I would fain acknowledge his
generosity and affectionate interest which make it possible for me to go
to college.</p>
<p>Thus it is that my friends have made the story of my life. In a thousand
ways they have turned my limitations into beautiful privileges, and
enabled me to walk serene and happy in the shadow cast by my deprivation.</p>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />