Hi Sandra
Your telescope is an f10 focal ratio with an equivalent focal length around 2m (2,032mm according to the specifications). The magnification you will get is calculated by dividing the focal length of the telescope by the focal length of the eyepiece.
So your 26mm eyepiece gives you a magnification of 2032/26 = 78 times. A 10mm eyepiece will give a magnification of 203 times. This is already quite a high magnification and your views will start to be limited by the "seeing" conditions of the sky. I think a 6mm (339 times magnification) will just be too much for all but exceptional conditions. I think you should not go shorter than 10mm and maybe look at designs which give you a wider field of view. The plossl design is around 50 deg apparent field of view (AFOV). There are designs, that won't be too expensive, that will give you 68-70 deg AFOV, and maybe 80 deg AFOV. Above these AFOV values, the eyepieces become much more expensive.
You also want to look at the "eye relief" figure.
I had a quick scan of this article and it looks quite good as well as being very detailed, if you want that:-
http://observers.org/beginner/eyepieces.freeman.html
At some stage, you might want to be thinking about a longer focal length eyepiece, up around 40mm, to give you less magnification and a better view therefore, of rich star fields and large nebula.