rowELL.] STAGES OF PHILOSOPHY. 25 j~uwjsi~.j MrAtjr~N UJf J.HUjUNUJ.JULX. ~0 of the earth, and there watched long and patiently, till at last the sun- god coming ont he shot an arrow at his face, but the fierce heat con- sumed the arrow ere it had finished its intended course; then an- other arrow was sped, but that was also consumed; and another, and still another, till only one remained in his quiver, but this was the magical arrow that had never failed its mark. T~-to~s, holding it in his hand, lifted the barb to his eye and baptized it in a divine tear; then the arrow was sped and struck the sun-god full in the face, and the sun was shivered into a thousand fragments, which fell to thé earth, causing a general conflagration. Then T~-M~, the hare-god, ned be- fore the destruction he had wrought, and as he ned the burning earth consnmed his feet, consamed his legs, eonsumed his body, consumed his hands and his arms-all were consumed but the head alone, which bowled across valleys and over mountains, fieeing destruction from the burning earth until at last, swollen with heat, the eyes of the god burst and the tears gushed forth in a fiood which spread over the earth and extinguished the nré. The sun-god was now conquered, and he ap- peared before a conncil of the gods to await sentence. In that long couneil were established the days and the nights, the seasons and the years, with the length thereof, and the sun was condemned to travel across the firmament by the saine trail day after day till the end of time. In this same philosophy we learn that in that ancient time a council of the gods was held to consider the propriety of making a moon, and at last the task was given to Whippoorwill, a god of the night, and a frog yielded himself a willing sacrifice for this purpose, and the 'WMp- poorwill, by incantations, and other magical means, transformed the frog into the new moon. The truth of this origin of the moon is made evident to our very senses; for do we not see thé frog riding the moon at night, and thé moon is cold, because the frog from which it was made was cold ? The philosopher of Oraibi tells us that when the people ascended by means of the magical tree which constituted the ladder from thé lower world to this, they found the firmament, the ceiling of this world, low down upon the earth-the noor.of this world. J~~o, one of their gods, raised the firmament on his shoulders to where it is now seen. Still the world was dark, as there was no sun, no moon, and no stars. So the people murmured because of the darkness and the cold. Matoito said, "Bring me seven maidens," and they brought him seven maid- ens and he said, "Bring me seven basbets of cotton-bolls," and they brought him seven baskets of cotton-bolls; and he taught the seven maidens to weave a magical fabric from thé cotton, and when they had finished it he held it aloft, and the breeze carried it away toward thé firmament, and in thé twinkling of an eye it was transformed into a beautifai full-orbed moon, and the same breeze caught the remnants of noccolent cotton which the maidens had scattered during their work,