Life, 1901-05-02 · page 5 of 22
Life — May 2, 1901 — page 5: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of "Reflections of a Mirror—V" This illustration depicts a domestic scene in what appears to be a wealthy household. A woman in elaborate dress stands prominently on the left, while servants or household staff attend to various tasks. The caption indicates this is part of a serialized story about a "perfect home" where the narrator has spent five years growing fond of the master and mistress. The narrative fragment mentions children and discusses the narrator (likely a servant) receiving instructions that "I must take command of some of the domestic arrangements." This appears to be **fiction/serialized literature** rather than political satire—specifically a narrative about household dynamics and servant experiences in a privileged setting. The "mirror" metaphor likely reflects observations of upper-class domestic life. Without additional context or visible caricatures, this seems to be straightforward storytelling rather than social commentary.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
SANANRANANSANNN | AVANAN SSAA vt e y 4 A f Za Z A q A g g 4 4 A WAALS SAN LQ’ £1 QAWANANN eo NRA ES LNN ONE END REFLECTIONS OF A MIRROR—V. 1 was tn this perfect home for about Ave years, growing fonder of my master and mistress all the time. Two children came to them to make thelr Joy complete. One sad day, | well remember, mny master recelved word that be must take command of some of the retnforcements, under Braddock, golng to America. My dear mistress wag left prostruted. comicbooks.com