Today's Reading
Chapter 130: Adam
The threshold passed.
The ape who stood was more than ape. The hand
That grasped had grasped. The shadow that was cast
Was no longer the shadow of the bland
And instinct-driven forebears. Something held
Behind the eyes. Something the gaze contained
That had not been there earlier. What swelled
In the forward-facing skull was not explained
By brain size alone—the Neanderthal had more,
And did not make it. What was made was made
By something else: the capacity to store
A word, a story, a name—the long parade
Of symbols that outlasted the mouth that spoke.
And somewhere in this long unfolding, somewhere
In the Pleistocene's slow and measured stroke,
There walked a man.
One man. Not a rare
Or miracle-distinguished man—a man
Like every other of his time and place,
Who hunted and ate and loved in the span
Of his seventy or eighty years, whose face
Was one face among thousands, and whose bones
Went back to dust like every other's bones—
Except in this: the long unbroken tones
Of the father-to-son inheritance—the stones
Of the Y chromosome, the patrilineal line—
Passed through this one man to every son
Of every son alive today. The sign
Of his paternity carried forward, run
Through ten thousand generations to the living:
Every man on earth today, from Tokyo
To Buenos Aires, from Lagos to Gävle's giving
And wind-scoured coast, descends in an unbroken flow
Of father-son-father-son from him.
We call him Adam.
Not the Adam of the Garden. Not the mythic stem
Of a six-thousand-year creation's madam
And master. But Adam as the living emblem
Of what the genealogical math compels:
That somewhere in the deep past, all men living
Converge on one man. Not because he dwells
In singular importance—the math is unforgiving
Of sentiment. It simply works that way:
Across enough generations, lineages
Are lost. A man with daughters only. A day
Of violence. A son that never images
Himself in a further son. The lines go out
One by one across the generations.
And what remains is not the many but
The narrow single thread whose ramifications
Reach us all—not because this one was chosen,
But because his was the one that did not die.
A sobering doctrine. The heroes are frozen
In the same dirt as the forgotten. The why
Is nothing but the arithmetic's reply
To the question: which one branch survived the prune.
Adam.
The man, one man, under an African moon,
Two hundred thousand years ago, or near,
Who did not know and did not need to know
That every hand that would someday appear
On the Manhattan sidewalks, or the slow
Rice-paddies of Jiangnan, or the hot
Arabian stones, or the Irish cliffs—
Each hand of each living son—would be the lot
And portion of his Y chromosome, the riffs
And variations of his single gift
Passed through the long dark centuries, his name
Forgotten and remade ten thousand ways, the rift
And re-convergence of genealogy's game.
He hunted. He ate. He loved what could be loved.
He buried his kin—perhaps. The practice of
The shovel and the cemetery moved
Onto the world later, after him. The dove
Of ritual had not yet been released.
He lived his life without the knowledge that
He lived it. He was not singular—the least
Or most distinguished of his time, the flat
And ordinary measure of a life
Was all he was. He was not rare. He was
The rule. And that is the gift, and that the knife
That cuts against the hero-myth: because
The common ancestor was common. The heir
And archetype of all of us, the swift
Forgettable and unremarkable, the bare
And quiet man—he was the Y's first lift.
Haplogroup A.
The tree's first trunk. The root from which the branches,
In the long time that was to come, would climb.
A stays in Africa. The lineage launches
Itself elsewhere only later. For the time
Of this chapter, there is only the trunk,
Only the deep African line, only the greater
Silence before the branching, the still-sunk
And rooted and staying lineage of the later
Chapters' unmoving precondition. A
Is carried, to this day, by the San of the Kalahari,
By the Mbuti and the forest peoples, the way
Of the oldest and deepest line, whose sari
Is the red earth, whose language is the click,
Whose painting is the ochre on the rock wall,
Whose survival is the old slow patient trick
Of staying when the rest of us chose to fall
Outward across the continents. They did not move.
They are the line that never left. They keep
The African source, the line without a groove
Cut by departure, the line that remained asleep
To the centuries of migration, the quiet
And un-diasporic and deeply rooted men
Whose blood runs along the same line, without riot,
From Adam's day to now. They are the when
And the where of the unmoved ancestry.
And there is A00.
The deepest root. The branch that dropped below
The rest of A, the singular anomaly
Discovered when a researcher, startled, slow
To accept the reading, found in the tree
Of an African-American man a lineage
That ran deeper than the human tree was thought
To extend. A lost face of a further stage
Of ancestry in a modern man, caught
In the blood of a descendant of the slave
Ships' cargo—a branch that split before
Anatomically modern humans gave
Rise to the rest. What it encodes, what it bore,
Is still debated. Some say A00 predates
The Homo sapiens origin—that it stands
As evidence of interbreeding with mates
Of an archaic kind, whose patient hands
Left their Y in the modern line through some
Quiet admixture in a forest where
No one was keeping score, where the low hum
Of a very ancient evening met the air
Of the very new, and they were not so different
That nothing passed between. The Perry case—
A name we will return to, as the pent
And patient subterranean trace
Shows itself again in later chapters. For now,
Let A00 sit quietly at the tree's deepest notch,
An intimation that the tree's slow plow
May run into soil still older, that the watch
And measure of our origin extends
Further than the standard story tells, and that
What came together in us, when the source sends
Us into history, had already sat
At the table with older guests.
But for now,
Adam.
The root. All men descend from him.
All the sons of all the sons somehow
Trace back to this one African, the dim
And unremembered common man. The line
Runs through him. Everything that was before
Is prologue. Everything after is sign
And symbol of his patriline's slow store
Of branching, of divergence, of the going
Forth of the tree into the world's four quarters.
And it is to the first splits, to the slowing
And the quickening of the branching waters,
That we turn next: to Cain, to Abel, to Seth—
The first three stories the genealogy tells,
The first three names the patriline's deep breath
Pronounces, the first three rung and bells
Of the long descent.
But honor Adam first.
The one who made no monument. The any
And every man whose blood and bloodless burst
Of ordinary days—whose unseen plenty
Of morning and evening, of birth and of dying,
Of the hand on the child's head, and the wife's name
Spoken in the hut at nightfall, and the crying
Of the infant, and the fire, and the tame
Dog at the threshold, and the hunger, and the share
Of the meat among the kin—was the whole
And only life he had. He did not care,
And had no way to care, that the whole soul
Of the human future would find its thread
In him. He was a man. He lived. He died.
And the thread ran on, from his son's son's bed,
Through ten thousand nights and ten thousand tides
Of generation, to the men alive
Tonight, whose own sons, tomorrow, will bear him still.
Adam.
The common man who made the tree thrive
Not by any greatness, but by the will
Of arithmetic alone. Not the hero.
Not the king. Not the saint. Not the chosen.
The common, the ordinary, the zero
Of any distinguishing quality, the frozen
And forgettable figure whose only gift
Was the one that every man gives: he had a son
Who had a son who had a son. The lift
And continuation of the line. The one
Inheritance that made him our ancestor
Was the unremarkable fact of surviving sons.
And this is the shape of our first chapter.
The one.
The one man in the African sun,
Whose patient walk across the soil of home
Bequeathed the Y to all the sons to come—
The whole long tree of men, the whole loud dome
Of voices and languages and migrations
That the later chapters will unpack. The root
Is here. The trunk is here. The bifurcations
Have not yet happened. The branches do not shoot
Out yet into the branching of the world.
There is only Adam, and the patient A,
And the whispering A00, and the curled
And unopened bud of the tree's African day.
Honor him.
For he is us, and we are him.
And when we speak the name, we raise the cup
Of our shared inheritance, however dim
Or distant, and we drink, and we look up
At the branching overhead, which starts, here, low,
In a single trunk, in a single patient man,
Under a single African moon, two hundred
Thousand years ago, or near, whose plain
And common hand bequeathed the Y to us.
The tree begins here.