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Helen Tells a Story: The Bollinger Baby, Chicago, 1915
The infant, face coiled like an enraged snake, never knew its agony.
I did. Annie fingerspelled the baby's story into my saddened hands.
The Bollinger baby, the doctor said, was an imbecile, with the brain of a carrot or celery stick. Why, he asked, save a death-in-life, allow imbecilic seed to breed?
Deaf and blind at 18 months, I grunted like a pig and hissed like a cat. But, my brain was no celery stick. I foraged my father's pockets for gum drops, buried my head in our dog's neck.
At age 7, I named my dolls Mudpie and Mamma Bear, and kissed my mother. When Annie, the magician, pulled language out of her hat, I told my story.
Yet, no hat trick lifted the Bollinger baby out of its fog. The infant never told its story. [from Helen Takes the Stage: The Helen Keller Poems. (Pudding House)]
Correspondence to a Deaf-Blind Poet: December 1938
One bite of moldy bread, a torn sleeve from my silk dress, soiled by rat turds, The Institute for the Blind trained me for verse, not begging, you write from Vienna.
To Hitler, Jews are like roaches, the blind and deaf are dumb vermin, you say in Greek, hoping the censors are dim.
In my Connecticut home, in my chair by the fire as I write Christmas cards and smell the pines, fear storms across your land, squelches all speech, takes your breath away.
People from presidents to paper-boys tell me I'm a God-send. Yet, I can do so little.
If only I could lift you out of the shadows on the shoulders of my fame. But, America wants no foreign defectives on its shores.
No Yuletide this year, only shadows. [from Helen Takes the Stage: The Helen Keller Poems. (Pudding House)]
Creed
I believe in daisy-pranked fields where my teacher told me Arabian Nights tales about peacocks, poppy seeds and goldfish in the river. I believe in dreams, though I won't tell mine, if you won't tell yours at breakfast. Our slumber world, even if the gods drop by, is boring before coffee. I believe scientists, armed with their facts, keep us on the straight and narrow, though the road to hell is paved with literalism. I believe in smell: tobacco, my dog's fur when when he emerges shaking from his bath, the sausage the cabbie eats when he stops for a light.
Hell is the smell of the sweatshop I visited last winter in the Bronx. A dwarfed boy tended his sister, while his mother sewed, hunched over a clamoring machine. I believe in God. He loves us all, but is no fool. The heavenly city isn't a stupid pearl and sapphire affair. It's a down-to-earth town. Dogs bark, peasants sing
folk songs, kids play stickball. Wrong-doers browbeat themselves. Every gang of crooks strives to outwit the rest, and misers hug their money bags to their hearts. I believe the Bible is the great poem of the world. [from Helen Takes the Stage: The Helen Keller Poems. Pudding House)]
Hershey Bars and Pin-Up Girls
Hey, I'm Jimmy, Forrest Gump for real. I don't go around saying, life's a box of chocolates. I bet my Ma wasn't sweet like Sally Field. I've never seen Ma. I dunno if she ever went to the movies, or if she had freckles and red hair like me. I never met Ma or Pa.
The State School for the Feeble Minded was all I had for folks. They called me imbecile idiot mentally defective an accident of nature dumber than the dumbest ass.
They fed me soggy oatmeal and grizzled meat that dogs wouldn't eat. We had to eat soap if we even touched a book.
One day, a doctor with cold hands, tried to give me a needle filled with green water. It smelled like pee. I told the doc I'd punch his face if he didn't put that thing away. It's only science, he said, you'd make such a good experimental subject.
Don't you dare even touch a girl's hand, the State folks said, Your kind's got no business even being out where normal people can see your imbecilic face.
A dumb hound won't know to come in when it rains, they hissed, you can't even tell when the rain starts to fall.
I wasn't that slow, I didn't know much about Hitler or Japan. But, when I heard about Pearl Harbor, I put on my ripped sneakers, grabbed the quarter I'd found in the janitor's closet, and ran to war!
Other grunts bitched about the K-rations, cold and never-ending gunfire. In the middle of the night, they wept for their girls at home. Not me.
My foxhole was my home. Hershey bars, pin-up girls and a Purple Heart -- my just desserts. I always knew when the rain would fall. [from The War Work poems]
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