English, asked by rucha2472003, 1 year ago

hello frnds !!

write some important incidents of novel
"the story of my life" ?

help plz ,it's urgent.​


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Answers

Answered by sushmithanair1402
1

1)childhood

2)) experience with nature

3)Anne's entry in her life. her role

4)helen learns to speak

5)world fair

6)fern querry

7)wright humason school

8)cambridge

9)radcliffe

Answered by mahmudulhassan635
1

Answer:Chapter-1 Helen was born on 27th June, 1880 in Tuscumbia, a  little town of northern Alabama in USA. Nineteen months after her birth, Helen  fell ill which left her with visual and hearing disabilities.

Chapter 2

Helen could not communicate with anyone except her own sign  language until she became seven years old.  Helen’s disabilities often annoyed her and she  lost her temper quite often. She would often kick her nurse Ella. Martha  Washington, the coloured girl was her childhood companion. Together they had  lots of fun doing mischief and pranks. Helen got herself in many precarious  situations owing to her inability to see and hear. Helen felt jealous of her  sister Mildred and even threw her once out of her cradle.

Chapter 3

Helen’s parents had an intense wish to educate their  disabled daughter. Helen’s mother came to know about Laura Bridgeman who had  similar disabilities as Helen and who had been successfully taught. Helen’s  father took Helen to Baltimore to see an eye-specialist with the hope of  getting Helen treated. She enjoyed the trip and behaved herself throughout the  journey. Dr. Chisholm expressed his inability to treat Helen. However, he  suggested the family to meet Dr. Graham Bell who could help them. The family  met Alexander Graham Bell who recommended the Kellers hire a teacher to help  their special daughter.

Chapter 4

Anne Sullivan, a young teacher with her own vision problems,  arrived at the Keller home in early March of 1887.She started teaching Helen  manual alphabet to which Helen did not respond encouragingly. Nothing clicked  until a few weeks after her arrival when she tried to teach Helen the  difference between “mug” and “water.”

Chapter 5

After Helen understood that things had names- and she could  learn those names from her teacher’s finger-spelling- her vocabulary grew. Then,  during the summer of 1887, she learned about the power of nature when a storm  came upon her while she was outside…on her own.

Chapter 6

Once she recognized things and actions had names, Helen  needed to comprehend abstract subjects. Trying to solve a problem, she felt her  teacher’s hand on her forehead while Miss Sullivan emphatically spelled “THINK.”  “In a flash,” Helen recognized that’s what she was doing- thinking.

Chapter 7

In her early days of learning, Helen worked outside with  Anne. It seemed like play since she had not yet commenced formal lessons. Helen  began to put words together in sentences, like “doll is on the bed.” The first  book she actually read was “Reader for Beginners.”

Chapter 8

At the age of seven, Helen Keller experienced her first real  Christmas. She gave, as well as received, presents. She was even invited to  participate with the local school children on Christmas Eve. Excited about what  was to come, she was the first to awake on Christmas morning.

Chapter 9

Helen visited the Perkins  Institute for the Blind in May of 1888. For the first time in her life, she met  the other children who used the manual alphabet. It was, she said, like coming  home to her own country, she toured places around Boston and especially loved Plymouth  Rock (because she could touch it).

Chapter 10

After her visit to Boston, Helen  and her teacher took a Cape-Cod holiday during which the child first  experienced the ocean. When a wave pulled her underwater, she was very  frightened. Also puzzled, she asked Anne Sullivan: “Who put salt in the water?”

Chapter 11

Vacationing with her family in the  mountains near Tuscumbia, Helen experienced the joys of childhood: riding a  pony, hunting for permissions and exploring in the woods. Then… she, her sister  Mildred and Miss Sullivan got lost! How would they find their way back?Chapter 12

As a child of South, Helen had not  experienced snow before the winter of 1889. While in the North, she played  outside in the cold weather. Her favorite winter sport was tobogganing- which  she was able to do with help.

Chapter 13

Even though she’d made great  progress, Helen was frustrated because she could not speak. She’d read about a  deaf-blind Norwegian girl, named Ragnhild Kaata, who had learned to do what  Helen longed for. At the Horace Mann School for the Deaf, Sarah Fuller worked  with her. Helen’s first spoken sentence was “It is warm.”

Chapter 14

When she was 11, Helen wrote a  story she thought was her own, and “The Frost King” was published by the  director of the Perkins Institute. She had not recalled someone had once read “The  Frost Fairies” (by Margaret T. Canby) to her. Eight people interrogated Helen, about  her plagiarized story. It was not an easy time for the child.

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