A girl once lived in the province
of Echigo, who from her earliest years tended
her parents with all filial piety. Her mother,
when, after a long illness she lay at the point of
death, took out a mirror that she had for many years
concealed, and giving it to her daughter, spoke thus,
“when I have ceased to exist, take this mirror
in thy hand night and morning, and looking at it,
fancy that ’tis I thou seest.”
With these last words she expired,
and the girl, full of grief, and faithful to her mother’s
commands, used to take out the mirror night and morning,
and gazing in it, saw there in a face like to the face
of her mother. Delighted thereat (for the village
was situated in a remote country district among the
mountains, and a mirror was a thing the girl had never
heard of), she daily worshipped her reflected face.
She bowed before it till her forehead touched the
mat, as if this image had been in very truth her mother’s
own self.
Her father one day, astonished to
see her thus occupied, inquired the reason, which
she directly told him. But he burst out laughing,
and exclaimed, “Why! ’tis only thine own
face, so like to thy mother’s, that is reflected.
It is not thy mother’s at all!”
This revelation distressed the girl.
Yet she replied: “Even if the face be not
my mother’s, it is the face of one who belonged
to my mother, and therefore my respectfully saluting
it twice every day is the same as respectfully saluting
her very self.” And so she continued to
worship the mirror more and more while tending her
father with all filial piety at least so
the story goes, for even to-day, as great poverty and
ignorance prevail in some parts of Echigo, the peasantry
know as little of mirrors as did this little girl.