The Legend
of the Sun, Moon, and Stars
( Why the
Sky is High )
Long ago, our elders say,
the sky was so close to the earth that one could touch it. But there were only
two people who could avail of that fact. They were the first man and
woman.
It has been said that the first woman
was so vain. She wore so much jewelry and despised work. Whenever the first man
would ask her to do something, she would pout. She pouted when he asked her to
clean the house. She pouted whenever he asked her to cook. She pouted whenever
he asked her to grind the rice grains everyday for their food.
"But if you don’t grind the rice, we
don’t get to eat," the first man reasoned, and even the vain first woman
could not dispute that.
But it was so much work grinding the
rice with a little pestles and mortars. So she poured all their rice for the
day into a very large mortar and took up a very large pestle to grind it with.
The pestle was so tall that when it hit the mortar, it touched the sky. The
first woman was oblivious to this. She only knew she had to grind all the rice
before her husband came home for supper.
She still wore all her jewelry. She
noticed that her jewelry kept falling off or hampered her in any other way
whenever she worked. So she hung her larger pieces of jewelry upon the sky,
which were her silver comb, her gold ring, and her long pearl necklace. And
then she went to work with the huge pestle, unknowing that as one end of the
pestle pounded onto the rice grains, the other end was pounding onto the sky.
The first woman only knew that having the sky so low only made her task more
difficult. So she pounded harder and harder on the rice. Higher and higher the
sky went, until with one enormous stroke, the first woman sent the sky flying
up, never to come so close to the earth again.
She sensed a draft behind her neck and
looked up. She was astonished to see that the sky had risen so high – and taken
her most precious things with it! She could see her silver comb shining where
the moon is now, and the beads of her lovely necklace twinkling all around it.
Her golden ring was nowhere in sight. The first woman grumbled, "I would
have worn those things again if I’d known they would go to waste.
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