Walk into a Victorian home immediately after a death, and you'd find every mirror in the house draped with black cloth. The official explanation was spiritual: mirrors could trap the deceased's soul or allow it to become lost between worlds. But there was a darker, more practical reason that polite Victorian society wouldn't acknowledge.
Mirrors in the 1800s contained mercury, and decomposing bodies release gases that chemically react with mercury to create horrifying visual phenomena. When those gases interacted with mirror surfaces, they could cause the reflective coating to tarnish, warp, or create dark spots that genuinely looked like faces or figures emerging from the glass.
Decomposition begins immediately after death. Within hours, bacteria start breaking down tissues, releasing gases including hydrogen sulfide, methane, and cadaverine. These gases seep into the air and settle on surfaces—especially on the metallic backing of Victorian-era mirrors.
When decomposition gases came into contact with the mercury amalgam, they caused oxidation that created dark, shadowy patterns on the mirror's surface. In dim candlelight—the only lighting Victorians had at night—these patterns could genuinely appear to move, shift, or take on humanoid shapes.
Imagine sitting vigil beside your dead relative in flickering candlelight, glancing at a mirror, and seeing a dark figure that wasn't there before. Your rational mind knows it's a chemical reaction, but your grieving, exhausted brain interprets it as the deceased person's spirit trapped in the glass. Covering the mirrors prevented these disturbing visual phenomena entirely.
There was another element Victorians understood through experience: reflections in candlelight create the illusion of movement through a phenomenon called pareidolia. The human brain is hardwired to recognize faces and human forms, even in random patterns. Shadows dancing across a tarnished, gas-damaged mirror in dim light would trigger that response intensely.
Some Victorian homes reported mirrors "weeping" or developing streaks that looked like tears running down the glass. This was condensation mixed with chemical residue from decomposition gases. In humid environments, the gases would cause moisture to bead and run down the mirror's surface, creating streaks that genuinely appeared as if the mirror itself was crying.
Photography became popular during the Victorian era, and some families reported that photographs taken in rooms with uncovered mirrors during wakes showed strange shadows or figures. These were likely double exposures or light reflections interacting with the chemically altered mirror surfaces, but they reinforced the belief that mirrors were spiritually dangerous during the mourning period.
Modern mirrors use aluminum or silver backing instead of mercury, so they don't react the same way to decomposition gases. But some funeral homes and older households still follow the tradition of covering mirrors when someone dies, often without knowing the original scientific reasoning behind it.
The Victorians were masters of disguising practical necessity as spiritual ritual. They understood through experience that uncovered mirrors near decomposing bodies caused disturbing visual phenomena, but they explained it through supernatural belief rather than admitting the unpleasant chemical reality.
The next time you see an old superstition, consider that it might have started as a solution to a real problem that people didn't want to discuss directly. The Victorians didn't want to say "we cover mirrors because corpse gases make them look haunted"—so they said "we cover mirrors to protect the soul."
Both explanations led to the same result: covering the mirrors and sparing mourners from witnessing something genuinely disturbing.