It does; hence, the ray of light is not changed.
When the object is of a blue color, why is blue only reflected?
Because it is the only color falling upon the glass, and there is no other color to reflect.
Is the color of any object changed by falling upon a looking-glass?
No; the color of every object is reflected from a looking-glass without change.
Do other objects generally reflect the colors falling upon them?
They do not; they absorb or hide the color of all other objects, and reflect only their own color.
If every object was a good reflector of color, like a looking-glass, what would result?
Then every object would reflect the color of every other object around it, and there would be an endless confusion of colors.
What objects reflect the most light?