Select the excerpt from The Story of My Life by Helen Keller that shows Helen's viewpoint of this event.
O My aunt made me a big doll out of towels. It was the most comical shapeless thing, this improvised doll, with no
nose, mouth, ears or eyes-nothing that even the imagination of a child could convert into a face.
O The morning after my teacher came she led me into her room and gave me a doll. The little blind children at the
Perkins Institution had sent it and Laura Bridgman had dressed it, but I did not know this until afterward.
o One day, while I was playing with my new doll, Miss Sullivan put my big rag doll into my lap also, spelled "d-0-1-
1" and tried to make me understand that "d-o-1-" applied to both. Earlier in the day we had had a tussle over the
words "m-u-g" and "w-a-te-r."
O Dr. Bell advised my father to write to Mr. Anagnos, director of the Perkins Institution in Boston, the scene of Dr.
Howe's great labours for the blind, and ask him if he had a teacher competent to begin my education.