One night the moon looked down
from the sky upon the people on the earth and said to herself, "How
sorrowful they look! I wish I knew what troubles them. The stars and
I are never sad, and I do not see why men should be troubled." She
listened closely, and she heard the people say, "How happy we should
be if death never came to us. Death is always before us."
The path of the moon lies across the sky, and she could not leave it
to go to the earth, but she called the white rabbit and said,
"Rabbit, should you be afraid to go down to the earth?"
"No," answered the rabbit, "I am not afraid."
"The people on the earth are troubled because death is before them.
Now will you go to them and whisper, 'The moon dies every night. You
can see it go down into the darkness, but when another night comes,
then the moon rises again,'—can you remember to tell them that?"
"Yes," said the rabbit, "I will remember."
"Say this," said the moon: "'The moon dies, but the moon rises
again, and so will you.'"
The rabbit was so glad to go to the earth that he danced and leaped
and sprang and frolicked, but when he tried to tell the people what
the moon had said, he could not remember, and he said, "The moon
says that she dies and will not rise again, and so you will die and
will not rise again."
The moon saw that the people were still troubled, and she called the
rabbit and asked what he had said to them.
"I said that as you die and do not rise, so they too will die and
not rise," said the rabbit.
"You did not try to remember, and you must be punished," said the
moon, and she fired an arrow tipped with flint at the rabbit.
The arrow struck the rabbit's lip and split it. From that time every
rabbit has had a split lip. The rabbit was afraid of the moon, and
he was afraid of the people on the earth. He had been brave before,
but now he is the most timid of animals, for he is afraid of
everything and everybody.