When greatness becomes pallid, when the extraordinary becomes extremely ordinary, it's almost always a hard story to tell.
The reason that Hans Christian Andersen's fable of "The Emperor's New Clothes" is still famous today, the one where the king loses sight of reality and is conned by weavers into wearing nothing at all yet the kingdom's subjects prolong his humiliation by saying nothing, isn't just to teach us a lesson about the societal urge to fawn at the feet of the high and mighty. One part of this morality tale also explains that it can feel awkward, ungrateful, even opportunistic, to shout "Take a look in the mirror!