THE LOOKING GLASS
A Fable
There was
once a dreadfully wicked hobgoblin. One day he had a simply marvelous idea. He
was going to make a looking glass that would reflect everything that was good
and beautiful in such a way that it would look dreadful or at least not very
important. When you looked in it, you would not be able to see any of the good
or the beautiful in yourself or in the world. Instead, this looking glass would
reflect everything that was bad or ugly and make it look very important. The
most beautiful landscapes would look like heaps of garbage, and the best people
would look repulsive or would seem stupid. People's faces would be so changed
that they could not be recognized, and if there was anything that a person was
ashamed of or wanted to hide, you could be sure that this would be just the
thing that the looking glass emphasized.
The
hobgoblin set about making this looking glass, and when he was finished, he was
delighted with what he had done. Anyone who looked into it could only see the
bad and the ugly, and all that was good and beautiful in the world was
distorted beyond recognition.
One
day, the hobgoblin's assistants decided to carry the looking glass up to the
heavens so that even the angels would look into it and see themselves as ugly
and stupid. They hoped that perhaps even God himself would look into it! But,
as they reached the heavens, a great invisible force stopped them and they
dropped the dreadful looking glass. And as it fell, it broke into millions of
pieces.
And
now came the greatest misfortune of all. Each of the pieces was hardly as large
as a grain of sand, and they flew about all over the world. If anyone got a bit
of glass in his eye there it stayed, and then he would see everything as ugly
or distressing. Everything good would look stupid. For every tiny splinter of
the glass possessed the same power that the whole glass had!
Some
people got a splinter in their hearts, and that was dreadful, too, for then
their hearts turned into lumps of ice and could no longer feel love.
The
hobgoblin watched all this and he laughed until his sides ached. And still the
tiny bits of glass flew about.
Adapted from “The
Snow Queen,” by Hans Christian Andersen
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