I learn many new words : November 10, 1889, letter from Helen Keller to William Wade
A pleasant Christmas : December 28, 1889, letter from Helen Keller to Ethel Gray
Wishes for a happy happy Christmas : December 21, 1893 [year uncertain], letter from Helen Keller to John Hitz
I would like very much to learn how to skate : February 10, 1895, letter from Helen Keller to Kate Keller
Our work is over for the summer : July 9, 1897, letter from Helen Keller to Kate Keller
How I wish we could slip away : February 3, 1899, letter from Helen Keller to John Hitz
The beautiful, free country : June 2, 1899, letter from Helen Keller to Alexander Graham Bell
Very hard to give up the idea of going to Radcliffe : October 20, 1899, letter from Helen Keller to John Hitz
Almost wholly a world of books : March 9, 1900, letter from Helen Keller to Alexander Graham Bell
Only love, dearest Mr. Hitz : April 22, 1900, letter from Helen Keller to John Hitz
Helen Keller, the story of my life. New York : Dover publications, 1903, chapter I
The world I live in. New York : Century Company, 1908, part IV : the power of touch
Our duties to the blind, presented at the annual meeting of the Massachusetts association for promoting the interests of the adult blind, January 5, 1904, Boston
A fair chance to be independent and self-respecting and useful : February 18, 1905, letter from Helen Keller to Mrs. Elliot Foster, secretary of the board of education of the blind, Hartford, Connecticut
The truth again, Ladies' Home Journal, vol. 26, January 1909
The enfranchisement of women : published in the Manchester (England) Advertiser, March 3, 1911
Their cause is my cause : letter written to the strikers at Little Falls, New York, November 1912
Blind leaders, Outlook, : vol. 105 (September 27, 1913)
19. The persecution of those who uphold their downtrodden brethren : December 12, 1917, letter from Helen Keller to President Woodrow Wilson
I am for you : July 27, 1924, letter from Helen Keller to Wisconsin senator and U.S. presidential candidate Robert La Follette
Again in working order : December 7, 1901, letter from Helen Keller to John Hitz
Some nice young men : March 3, 1902, letter from Helen Keller to Kate Keller
I am very sorry, dear mother : May 12, 1902, letter from Helen Keller to Kate Keller
I shall not lose her, and I shall gain a brother : April 7, 1905, letter from Helen Keller to Alexander Graham Bell
To fight my battles without further help : December 14, 1910, letter from Helen Keller to Andrew Carnegie
To enliven things a bit : January 24, 1911, letter from Helen Keller to Kate Keller
Blundered so grievously as to love me : October 5, 1912, letter from Helen Keller to Anne Sullivan Macy
Perhaps a little bit crestfallen : April 21, 1913, letter from Helen Keller to Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Carnegie
Have you forgotten all : January 15 (possibly 25), 1914, letter from Helen Keller to John Macy
Your unkind and altogether unbrotherly note : March 4, 1914, letter from Helen Keller to John Macy
How alone and unprepared I often feel : January 30, 1917, letter from Helen Keller to Anne Sullivan Macy
The cruelty of society shakes me so violently : March 1, 1917, letter from Helen Keller to Anne Sullivan Macy
Manifold demands, requests and interruptions : July 8, 1919, letter from Helen Keller to Kate Keller
Among the hills in Los Angeles : September 13, 1918, letter from Helen Keller to Lenore Smith
We have given up vaudeville altogether : August 29, 1920, letter from Helen Keller to Kate Keller
Memories of mother's journeyings with us : November 20, 1921, letter from Helen Keller to Mildred Keller Tyson
Our expenses are of necessity greater than for people in ordinary circumstances : September 9, 1922, letter from Helen Keller to Henry Ford
My religion. New York : Doubleday, 1928, chapter 2
Midstream : my later life. New York : Doubleday, 1929 : chapter 3 : my first years at Wrentham, chapter II : in the whirlpool
Helen Keller's journal. London : Michael Joseph, 1938
How important the foundation is June 7, 1924, letter from Helen Keller to Mildred Keller Tyson
Who better than the state can be that friend? : Undated 1927 speech before the Iowa State Legislature
Giving the blind worthwhile books : March 27, 1930, testimony before the committee on the library, house of representatives
To earn their livelihood : May 19, 1933, letter from Helen Keller to President Franklin Roosevelt
The talking-book to every corner of dark-land : April 20, 1935, letter from Helen Keller to Eleanor Roosevelt
An amendment of great importance to the blind : June 21, 1935, letter from Helen Keller to Thomas H. Cullen
The double shadow of blindness and deafness : June 11, 1941, letter from Helen Keller to Walter Holmes
The hardest pressed and least cared-for : October 3, 1944, testimony before the house subcommittee of labor investigating aid to physically handicapped
Multitudes of injured servicemen : February 8, 1945, letter from Helen Keller to Clare Heineman
The Japanese nation has watched over us both : July 14, 1937, letter from Helen Keller to John H. Finley
The impressions I have had of Japan, Korea, Manchuria, and the Pacific : September 14, 1937, letter from Helen Keller to M.C. Migel
The Nazi authorities have closed the institute : December 2, 1938, letter from Helen Keller to John H. Finley
This time of immeasurable stakes : October 30, 1944, letter from Helen Keller to Vice-President Henry A. Wallace
The battle of eyes : June 24, 1929, letter from Helen Keller to M.C. Migel
Discuss the thousand and one things : August 3, 1931, letter from Helen Keller to Amelia Bond
These adventures under the midnight sun : August 21, 1933, letter from Helen Keller to M.C. Migel
My only news is loneliness : undated 1934 or 1935, letter from Helen Keller to Anne Sullivan Macy
My faith that Teacher is near is absolute : December 3, 1936, letter from Helen Keller to M.C. Migel
Bury myself deep in thought : September 4, 1938, letter from Helen Keller to Lenore Smith
You inspire other women : January 30, 1939, letter from Helen Keller to Eleanor Roosevelt
That cup of vernal delight : March 21, 1943, letter from Helen Keller to Katharine Cornell
Alas! I am incorrigible : April 28, 1943, letter from Helen Keller to Clare Heineman
Happy heart-throbs : June 19, 1944, letter from Helen Keller to Jo Davidson
My public acts and utterances : September 18, 1944, letter from Helen Keller to Nella Braddy Henney
A peal of joy from my heart over the president's re-election : November 11, 1944, letter from Helen Keller to Jo Davidson
The tidings of the president's death : April 22, 1945, letter from Helen Keller to Jo Davidson
Teacher. New York : Doubleday, 1956, chapter 5
The beauty and the tragedy which endeared Greece to me : February 10, 1947, letter from Helen Keller to Eric Boulter
Hiroshima's fate is a Greek tragedy on a vast scale : October 14, 1948, letter from Helen Keller to Nella Braddy Henney
Hiroshima is beginning to flourish again : undated speech from 1948 trip to Hiroshima
Our tour of South Africa : August 1, 1951, letter from Helen Keller to Jo and Florence Davidson
Our trip through the near east : July 2, 1952, letter from Helen Keller to Nella Braddy Henney
The blind in Chile : April 25, 1953, speech at the University of Concepcion, Concepcion, Chile
One of the numberless instruments in God's hand : February 1, 1955, farewell speech
The people of India most hospitable : March 14, 1955, letter from Helen Keller to Eric Boulter
Another abyss of evil : September 22, 1946, letter from Helen Keller to Nella Braddy Henney.