In ancient days there lived in a remote
part of Japan a man and his wife, and they were blessed with a little girl, who
was the pet and idol of her parents. On one occasion the man was called away on
business in distant Kyoto. Before he went he told his daughter that if she were
good and dutiful to her mother he would bring her back a present she would
prize very highly. Then the good man took his departure, mother and daughter
watching him go.
At last he returned to his home, and after
his wife and child had taken off his large hat and sandals he sat down upon the
white mats and opened a bamboo basket, watching the eager gaze of his little
child. He took out a wonderful doll and a lacquer box of cakes and put them
into her outstretched hands. Once more he dived into his basket, and presented
his wife with a metal mirror. Its convex surface shone brightly, while upon its
back there was a design of pine trees and storks.
The good man's wife had never seen a mirror
before, and on gazing into it she was under the impression that another woman
looked out upon her as she gazed with growing wonder. Her husband explained the
mystery and bade her take great care of the mirror.
Not long after this happy homecoming and
distribution of presents the woman became very ill. Just before she died she
called to her little daughter, and said: "Dear child, when I am dead take
every care of your father. You will miss me when I have left you. But take this
mirror, and when you feel most lonely look into it and you will always see
me." Having said these words she passed away.
In due time the man married again, and his
wife was not at all kind to her stepdaughter. But the little one, remembering
her mother's words, would retire to a corner and eagerly look into the mirror,
where it seemed to her that she saw her dear mother's face, not drawn in pain
as she had seen it on her deathbed, but young and beautiful.
One day this child's stepmother chanced to
see her crouching in a corner over an object she could not quite see, murmuring
to herself. This ignorant woman, who detested the child and believed that her
stepdaughter detested her in return, fancied that this little one was
performing some strange magical art--perhaps making an image and sticking pins
into it. Full of these notions, the stepmother went to her husband and told him
that his wicked child was doing her best to kill her by witchcraft.
When the master of the house had listened
to this extraordinary recital he went straight to his daughter's room. He took
her by surprise, and immediately the girl saw him she slipped the mirror into
her sleeve. For the first time her doting father grew angry, and he feared that
there was, after all, truth in what his wife had told him, and he repeated her
tale forthwith.
When his daughter had heard this unjust
accusation she was amazed at her father's words, and she told him that she
loved him far too well ever to attempt or wish to kill his wife, who she knew
was dear to him.
"What have you hidden in your
sleeve?" said her father, only half convinced and still much puzzled.
"The mirror you gave my mother, and
which she on her deathbed gave to me. Every time I look into its shining
surface I see the face of my dear mother, young and beautiful. When my heart
aches--and oh! it has ached so much lately--I take out the mirror, and mother's
face, with sweet, kind smile, brings me peace, and helps me to bear hard words
and cross looks."
Then the man understood and loved his child
the more for her filial piety. Even the girl's stepmother, when she knew what
had really taken place, was ashamed and asked forgiveness. And this child, who
believed she had seen her mother's face in the mirror, forgave, and trouble
forever departed from the home.
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