Sunday, 9 November 2014

How Rabbit Brought Fire to the People

Hi dear friends and followers

The last people to be featured in our survey of Native American Legends and Myths were the Croatan, the original inhabitants of the Outer Banks of North Carolina and the Lost Colony of Roanoke.

Today we move on to South Carolina with a selection from the legends of the Creek People, about How Rabbit Brought Fire to the People.

The maps that I include with any legends are not, by any means, intended to make you believe that there were any hard boundaries between Native tribes or Peoples. They believe that they belong to the land and that the land belongs to no one.


Rabbit, as a mythological figure, is a trickster. This status cuts both ways, depending upon who is being tricked and the party telling the story. You will see what I mean when you read this legend. Rabbit is a recurring figure in stories told by multiple Peoples.

How Rabbit Brought Fire to the People

In the beginning there was no fire and the earth was cold. Then the Thunderbirds sent their lightning to a sycamore tree on an island where the Weasels lived. The Weasels were the only ones who had fire and they would not give any of it away.

The people knew that there was fire on the island because they could see smoke coming from the sycamore, but the water was too deep for anyone to cross. When winter came the people suffered so much from the cold that they called a council to find some way of obtaining fire from the Weasels. They invited all the animals who could swim.

"How shall we obtain fire?" the people asked.

Most of the animals were afraid of the Weasels because they were bloodthirsty and ate mice and moles and fish and birds. Rabbit was the only one who was brave enough to try to steal fire from them. "I can run and swim faster than the Weasels," he said. "I am also a good dancer. Every night the Weasels build a big fire and dance around it. Tonight I will swim across and join in the dancing. I will run away with some fire."

He considered the matter for a while and then decided how he would do it. Before the sun set he rubbed his head with pine tar so as to make his hair stand up. Then, as darkness was falling, he swam across to the island.

The Weasels received Rabbit gladly because they had heard of his fame as a dancer. Soon they had a big fire blazing and all began dancing around it. As the Weasels danced, they approached nearer and nearer the fire in the center of the circle. They would bow to the fire and then dance backwards away from it.

When Rabbit entered the dancing circle, the Weasels shouted to him: "Lead us, Rabbit!" He danced ahead of them, coming closer and closer to the fire. He bowed to the fire, bringing his head lower and lower as if he were going to take hold of it. While the Weasels were dancing faster and faster, trying to keep up with him, Rabbit suddenly bowed very low so that the pine tar in his hair caught fire in a flash of flame.


He ran off with his head ablaze, and the angry Weasels pursued him, crying, "Catch him! Catch him! He has stolen our sacred fire! Catch him, and throw him down!"


But Rabbit outran them and plunged into the water, leaving the Weasels on the shore. He swam across the water with the flames still blazing from his hair.

The Weasels now called on the Thunderbirds to make it rain so as to extinguish the fire stolen by Rabbit. For three days rain poured down upon the earth, and the Weasels were sure that no fire was left burning except in their sycamore tree.

Rabbit, however, had built a fire in a hollow tree, and when the rain stopped and the sun shone, he came out and gave fire to all the people. After that whenever it rained, they kept fires in their shelters, and that is how Rabbit brought fire to the people.

Thank you again for dropping by to visit with Frizzy Lizzy I would appreciate knowing what your thoughts are on Frizzy Lizzy. Thank you and have a wonderful weekend.

ڰۣIn Loving Light from the Fairy Ladyڰۣ


No comments :

Post a Comment