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HELEN pulls away, tries to open the suitcase again ANNIE points her hand overhead again. Then HELEN returns to the suitcase, tries to open it, cannot. She puts her hands on HELEN’S arms, but HELEN at once pulls away, and they confront each other with a distance between.
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ANNIE’S gaze is grave, unpitying, very attentive. She moves her hand on to ANNIE’S forearm, and dress and ANNIE brings her face within reach of HELEN’S fingers, which travel over it, quite without timidity, until they encounter and push aside the smoked glasses. HELEN at once grasps it, and commences to explore it, like reading a face. ANNIE puts forth her hand, and touches HELEN’S. Then she drops the suitcase on the porch with intentional heaviness, HELEN starts with the jar, and comes to grope over it. When ANNIE finally reaches the porch steps she stops, contemplating HELEN for a last moment before entering her world. (KATE silences him with a hand on his arm. Then ANNIE begins across the yard to her, lugging her suitcase.) (ANNIE turns, and sees HELEN on the porch. KELLER:-view women as the flowers of civiliza-ĪNNIE : I’ve got something in it for Helen! KELLER : I couldn’t think of it, Miss Sullivan. KELLER: Not at all, I have it, Miss Sullivan. KELLER acquires the suitcase, and ANNIE gets her hands on it too, though still endeavoring to live up to the general air of propertied manners.)ĪNNIE : I’ll take the suitcase, thanks. (In the house the setter BELLE flees into the family room, pursued by HELEN with groping hands the dog doubles back out the same door, and HELEN still groping for her makes her way out to the porch she is messy, her hair tumbled, her pinafore now ripped, her shoelaces untied. KATE: We’ve put you in the upstairs corner room, Miss Annie, if there’s any breeze at all this summer, you’ll feel it. KELLER: Where Miss Sullivan can get at it, I imagine. JAMES: Where would you like the trunk, father? I trust you had an agreeable journey?ĪNNIE: Oh, I had several! When did this country get so big? KATE: My husband, Miss Annie, Captain Keller.ĪNNIE : Captain, how do you do. KELLER : Welcome to Ivy Green, Miss Sullivan. (KELLER descends, and crosses toward the carriage this conversation begins offstage and moves on.) (She goes back into the house, as KELLER comes out on the porch to gaze.) VINEY: Cap’n Keller! Cap’n Keller, they comin’! As she looks offstage, we hear the clop of hoofs, a carriage stopping, and voices.)
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The lights dim on them, having simultaneously risen full on the house VINEY has already entered the family room, taken a water pitcher, and come out and down to the pump. (KATE smiles again, ANNIE smiles back, and they precede JAMES offstage. Don’t think of us as strangers, Miss Annie.ĪNNIE : Oh, strangers aren’t so strange to me. We’ll do all we can to help, and to make you feel at home. (They smile at each other, and KATE pats her hand.) (ANNIE studies her face she likes her, too.)ĪNNIE: No, to tell you the truth I’m as shaky inside as a baby’s rattle! You are young, despite your years, to have such-confidence. We can’t get through to teach her to sit still. KATE: What will you try to teach her first?ĪNNIE: First, last, and-in between, language.ĪNNIE: Language is to the mind more than light is to the eye.
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(But it costs her something to say this.)ĪNNIE : Well, some have the luck of the Irish, some do not. Another is to be young, why, I’ve got energy to do anything. One is his work behind me, I’ve read every word he wrote about it and he wasn’t exactly what you’d call a man of few words. Keller, don’t lose heart just because I’m not on my last legs. (ANNIE takes the bull by the horns, valiantly.)ĪNNIE: Mrs. KATE : May I ask how old you are?ĪNNIE: Well, I’m not in my teens, you know! I’m twenty. More like-eggs everyone was afraid would break. he never treated them like ordinary children. But then I thought when I was going over his reports. Howe did wonders, but-an ordinary child? No, never. (KATE’S face loses its remaining hope, still appraising her youth.)ĭr. KATE: Is it possible, even? To teach a deaf-blind child half of what an ordinary child learns-has that ever been done? KATE: I mean, to teach anyone as difficult as Helen.ĪNNIE: I mean to try. You’re very young.ĪNNIE : Oh, you should have seen me when I left Boston. (Now she voices part of her doubt, not as such, but ANNIE understands it.) There’s been such a bustle in the house, she expects something, heaven knows what. But don’t be surprised if I get out to push the horse! ANNIE tries to make ladylike small talk, though her energy now and then erupts she catches herself up whenever she hears it.)ĪNNIE: You-live far from town, Mrs.