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Although little Nathaniel was sensible and old enough not to credit the
figure of the Sand-Man with such gruesome attributes, yet the dread of him became
fixed in his heart. He determined to find out what the Sand-Man looked like;
and one evening, when the Sand-Man was expected again, he hid in his father’s
study. He recognized the visitor as the lawyer Coppelius, a repulsive person whom
the children were frightened of when he occasionally came to a meal; and he now
identified this Coppelius with the dreaded Sand-Man. As regards the rest of
the scene, Hoffmann already leaves us in doubt whether what we are witnessing is
the first delirium of the panic-stricken boy, or a succession of events which
are to be regarded in the story as being real. His father and the guest are at
work at a brazier with glowing flames. The little eavesdropper hears Coppelius
call out: ‘Eyes here! Eyes here!’ and betrays himself by screaming aloud.
Coppelius seizes him and is on the point of dropping bits of red-hot coal from the
fire into his eyes, and then of throwing them into the brazier, but his father
begs him off and saves his eyes. After this the boy falls into a deep swoon; and
a long illness brings his experience to an end. Those who decide in favour of
the rationalistic interpretation of the Sand-Man will not fail to recognize in
the child’s phantasy the persisting influence of his nurse’s story. The bits of
sand that are to be thrown into the child’s eyes turn into bits of red-hot coal
from the flames; and in both cases they are intended to make his eyes jump
out. In the course of another visit of the Sand-Man’s, a year later, his father is
killed in his study by an explosion. The lawyer Coppelius disappears from the
place without leaving a trace behind.