Long ago, Rabbit was a great hunter. He lived with his grandmother in a lodge which stood
deep in the Micmac forest. It was winter and Rabbit set traps and laid snares to catch game for
food. He caught many small animals and birds, until one day he discovered that some
mysterious being was robbing his traps. Rabbit and his grandmother became hungry. Though he
visited his traps very early each morning, he always found them empty.
At first Rabbit thought that the robber might be a cunning wolverine, until one morning he found
long, narrow footprints alongside his trap line. It was, he thought, the tracks of the robber, but
they looked like moonbeams. Each morning Rabbit rose earlier and earlier, but the being of the
long foot was always ahead of him and always his traps were empty.
Rabbit made a trap from a bowstring with the loop so cleverly fastened that he felt certain that
he would catch the robber when it came. He took one end of the thong with him and hid
himself behind a clump of bushes from which he could watch his snare. It was bright moonlight
while he waited, but suddenly it became very dark as the moon disappeared. A few stars were
still shining and there were no clouds in the sky, so Rabbit wondered what had happened to the
moon.
Someone or something came stealthily through the trees and then Rabbit was almost blinded by
a flash of bright, white light which went straight to his trap line and shone through the snare
which he had set. Quick as a lightning flash, Rabbit jerked the bowstring and tightened the
noose. There was a sound of struggling and the light lurched from side to side. Rabbit knew b
the tugging on his string that he had caught the robber. He fastened the bowstring to a nearby
sapling to hold the loop tight.
Rabbit raced back to tell his grandmother, who was a wise old woman, what had happened.
She told him that he must return at once and see who or what he had caught. Rabbit, who was
very frightened, wanted to wait for daylight but his grandmother said that might be too late, so
he returned to his trap line.
When he came near his traps, Rabbit saw that the bright light was still there. It was so bright
that it hurt his eyes. He bathed them in the icy water of a nearby brook, but still they smarted.
He made big snowballs and threw them at the light, in the hope of putting it out. As they went
close to the light, he heard them sizzle and saw them melt. Next, Rabbit scooped up great
pawfuls of soft clay from the stream and made many big clay balls. He was a good shot and
threw the balls with all of his force at the dancing white light. He heard them strike hard and
then his prisoner shouted.
Then a strange, quivering voice asked why he had been snared and demanded that he be set
free at once, because he was the man in the moon and he must be home before dawn came.
His face had been spotted with clay and, when Rabbit went closer, the moon man saw him and
threatened to kill him and all of his tribe if he were not released at once.
Rabbit was so terrified that he raced back to tell his grandmother about his strange captive. She
too was much afraid and told Rabbit to return and release the thief immediately. Rabbit went
back, and his voice shook with fear as he told the man in the moon that he would be released if
he promised never to rob the snares again. To make doubly sure, Rabbit asked him to promise
that he would never return to ear, and the moon man swore that he would never do so. Rabbit
could hardly see in the dazzling light, but at last he managed to gnaw through the bowstring with
his teeth and the man in the moon soon disappeared in the sky, leaving a bright trail of light
behind him.
Rabbit had been nearly blinded by the great light and his shoulders were badly scorched. Even
today, rabbits blink as though light is too strong for their eyes; their eyelids are pink, and their
eyes water if they look at a bright light. Their lips quiver, telling of Rabbit's terror.
The man in the moon has never returned to earth. When he lights the world, one can still see the
marks of the clay which Rabbit threw on his face. Sometimes he disappears for a few nights,
when he is trying to rub the marks of the clay balls from his face. Then the world is dark; but
when the man in the moon appears again, one can see that he has never been able to clean the
clay marks from his shining face.