Farrow ends up there and sees the Jabberwock. The two are murderers who dispose of the bodies by sending them through an enchanted mirror. The lawyer does some legwork and finds a creepy couple in an old house where Ellery had been. Farrow is the lawyer of an insane man, Jason Ellery, who repeats the famous lines of Carroll’s poem. “Beware the Jabberwock” ( This Magazine Is Haunted #3, February 1952) refers to Lewis Carroll and his famous poem from Alice. Only by destroying the mirror can he save his fiancee. When gramps dies and the mirror is revealed, Brad sees Elyse in the form of Isis in the reflection. Unfortunately, there is a mirror that must remain covered at all times. “The Mirror of Isis” ( Eerie #3, October-November 1951) starts when Brad and Elyse visit grandfather so he can meet the bride-to-be. Long before DC’s Secrets of the Haunted House did “The Murder Mirror” (1975), these ten (and many more like Marvel’s Uncanny Tales) had given us portals to other worlds and evil reflections. It is never a surprise when the comics utilize an old chestnut for the horror titles. Probably the most famous was King Kull’s encounter with an evil mirror in Robert E. Laws did it later with “Stranger in the Mirror”. Don’t scrap that black paint off its silvery surface! Mary Brown did it earlier in “The Magic Mirror”. Donald Wandrei had “The Painted Mirror” in Weird Tales. Abraham Merritt debuted with “Through the Dragon Glass”, a magical Chinese doorway to another realm. What better place to show our dopplegangers? Lewis Carroll took Alice behind the Looking Glass but Oscar Wilde substituted a painting for a mirror in The Picture of Dorian Gray. Magic in such stories requires certain items including a mirror.The Gothics liked mirrors too. Snow White’s step mother talked to hers, asked it questions. Of course, the concept of an evil mirror or a magical one anyway is as old as faery tales. Look into the haunted mirror and what do you see? Here are ten different visions from the Golden Age of comics.