"Where?" I squeezed my eyes to find it.
"Imagine a clock. Look at the 1 and 2 for the ears. Find the tail at about 7 o’clock," he said.
I learned to tell time in circular before digital clocks.
The moon rabbit appears in fables, folklore and poetry around the world. Sansanka, the moon in Sanskrit translates, "having the marks of a hare."
The moon rabbit appears in fables, folklore and poetry around the world. Sansanka, the moon in Sanskrit translates, "having the marks of a hare."
In a Buddhist fable, a monkey, jackal and rabbit happened upon a beggar who needed food. While the monkey gathered fruits from trees, the jackal caught a lizard and stole a pot of milk-curd. The rabbit only ate grass and had nothing to offer the beggar. She flung herself into the fire the man had built. Suddenly, the man revealed himself as the god, Sakra. Touched by the rabbit's sacrifice, he designed her likeness on the moon for everyone to see.
The Han Dynasty poets referred to the "Jade Rabbit" or the "Gold Rabbit." These Chinese characters represented a word for the moon: 玉兔 金兔.
A Taoist fable revealed a hare, the gemmeous, who served the genii. The creature ground an elixir of immortality on the moon. Imperial Chinese robes of the 18th-century revealed the white hare making the elixir in embroidery.
Told in a Native American Cree legend, a rabbit wished to ride the moon. The crane agreed to fly him there. As the rabbit's weight pulled during the trip, it stretched the bird's legs. They remained elongated from then on. When they reached the moon, the rabbit touched the crane's head leaving a red mark. The rabbit still rides the moon.
by Cyra R. Cancel |
Silhouette Tease
Wolf runs
from the prairie
jounces into the sky
unable to
snatch the rabbit
stuck on lunar highlands
Once the moon glowed
clean as bone
until sun flung
rabbit there
for resisting
the bidding
to dash him
faster
round
the earth
Now sun
lures wolf
hoodwinks him
with light beams
to reveal the rabbit
in the moon
in the moon
Sun laughs
as wolf howls
at his prey
- Penny Wilkes
Look for the bunny tonight. Enjoy a writing festival today in celebration of Summer Solstice. Imagine yourself reveling at Stonehenge near the fire wondering about the rabbit in the moon. Think about Shakespeare and enjoy a midsummer night's dream.
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