Which Describes a Looking-Glass and the Broken
Fragments.
YOU
must attend to the commencement of this story, for when we get to
the end we shall know more than we do now about a very wicked
hobgoblin; he was one of the very worst, for he was a real demon.
One day, when he was in a merry mood, he made a looking-glass which
had the power of making everything good or beautiful that was
reflected in it almost shrink to nothing, while everything that was
worthless and bad looked increased in size and worse than ever. The
most lovely landscapes appeared like boiled spinach, and the people
became hideous, and looked as if they stood on their heads and had
no bodies.
Their countenances were so distorted that no one
could recognize them, and even one freckle on the face appeared to
spread over the whole of the nose and mouth. The demon said this was
very amusing. When a good or pious thought passed through the mind
of any one it was misrepresented in the glass; and then how the
demon laughed at his cunning invention. All who went to the demon’s
school—for he kept a school—talked everywhere of the wonders they
had seen, and declared that people could now, for the first time,
see what the world and mankind were really like.
They carried the glass about everywhere, till at
last there was not a land nor a people who had not been looked at
through this distorted mirror. They wanted even to fly with it up to
heaven to see the angels, but the higher they flew the more slippery
the glass became, and they could scarcely hold it, till at last it
slipped from their hands, fell to the earth, and was broken into
millions of pieces. But now the looking-glass caused more
unhappiness than ever, for some of the fragments were not so large
as a grain of sand, and they flew about the world into every
country.
When one of these tiny atoms flew into a
person’s eye, it stuck there unknown to him, and from that moment he
saw everything through a distorted medium, or could see only the
worst side of what he looked at, for even the smallest fragment
retained the same power which had belonged to the whole mirror. Some
few persons even got a fragment of the looking-glass in their
hearts, and this was very terrible, for their hearts became cold
like a lump of ice. A few of the pieces were so large that they
could be used as window-panes; it would have been a sad thing to
look at our friends through them.
Other pieces were made into spectacles; this was
dreadful for those who wore them, for they could see nothing either
rightly or justly. At all this the wicked demon laughed till his
sides shook—it tickled him so to see the mischief he had done. There
were still a number of these little fragments of glass floating
about in the air, and now you shall hear what happened with one of
them. |