Today's Reading
Chapter 131: Cain, Abel, and Seth
The tree began with Adam. One root. One trunk.
But trees do not stay trunks. The wood divides.
The branch emerges. The single column, sunk
Into the earth, rises up and rides
Upward into many. And so it was
With Adam's line. The Y chromosome held
Its signature, but in the patient cause
Of the generations, mutations swelled
Into the clade, into the diverging
Sub-lines, into the splits that taxonomists
Now call A, B, and BT—the emerging
Branches of the tree. And the mythic hosts
And chronicles of narrative, meeting these splits,
Gave them names. And the names that were given,
By the tellers who told what the record admits
And what it does not, were Cain and Abel and Seth, driven
Into the roles of the first three branches:
The three sons of Adam. The first three splits
Of the tree that is all our lineage. The hunches
And guesses and structural early fits
Of the earliest divergence, rendered by
The biblical text as the story of three brothers.
Cain.
The first son. The first-born. The sky
And earth-tiller. The one whose mothers
And fathers looked on him and saw the fruit
Of their union, the first human-born human.
The one whose hand had first touched the root
Of the soil with intent to plant, to summon
The grain from the dust. The one whose dominion
Over land would become the dominant mode
Of human life in the millennia to come—in the minion
And farmer and city-builder's coded
And settled practice. But in the frame
Of Adam's time, Cain was early—too early. The knife
Of his agriculture had not yet tamed
The wild into the wheat-field. The rife
And teeming stalk of barley and einkorn
Was the future. What Cain had was an impulse
Toward the settled, without the settlement. A thorn
Of a vocation that did not yet hold its pulse.
And Abel. The second son. The shepherd.
The one who followed the herd across the plain,
Who did not settle, who was the pure and pert
Expression of the older nomad-strain,
The hunter-gatherer in the softer
And herd-oriented mode. The one who moved
With the flocks. The one whose wandering was aloft er
Than Cain's staying. The one who proved
That the human could be both—could plant and also
Walk. Could stay and also go. The dialectic
Was in the two boys from the start—the chassis
Of civilization's future, and its lectic
And deep debate: to stay or go, to till
The soil or follow the herd, to settle down
Or remain in motion—the question of the will
Of humankind, rendered in a kid-sized gown
In the first pair of brothers.
And then the blood.
Cain rose up and slew Abel. The reason
Is told in the text, but the reasons are obscured
By the centuries of retelling. Some season
Of jealousy, some insult, some blurred
Dispute over offerings—over which of the two
Presented a gift that pleased the divine Lord
More—and the elder brother did what brothers do
When brothers want to silence brothers. In the hour
Of the field, the rock was lifted and brought down,
And Abel's skull was broken, and the shower
Of the first blood fell on the soil. The crown
Of the first-born became the sign of the coil
Of violence that human history would not escape.
And this is where the Gaiad's telling turns.
For in the standard text, Abel dies in the shape
Of the childless martyr—his name returns
To the grave unattended, his line erased
Before it had begun. And Cain, the murderer, bears
The whole of the text's genealogy, graced
With wife and son and grandson, and the heirs
Of his city Enoch, and his Lamech's daughters,
And his metallurgists and his musicians—the line
Of Cain in the biblical account, the waters
That were supposed to carry the humankind's sign.
But the Gaiad reads it otherwise.
For in
The Gaiad's telling, the murderer's line goes out.
Cain is marked, yes. Cain wanders. The din
Of his cities is loud but short. The shout
And murmur of Cain's descendants does not last.
His line, in the Gaiad's reading, is a draw—
An unclaimed round, a placeholder in the cast,
A character who occupies the raw
Uncompleted corner of the tree.
No Y-haplogroup alive today traces
To him. The murderer's blood runs empty,
Runs out into the sand. The mark that places
The shield upon his forehead does not save
His line—it saves his person, only. The shield
Is personal, not patrimonial. The cave
Of his descent is blocked. The field
Is his to wander, but the field is not
His legacy. He has no legacy. The knot
Of blood and earth that he began to knot
Is a knot that has no further knot.
And Abel, killed, survives.
The counter-
Intuitive reversal of the standard frame:
The victim's seed, the range
Of his descendants, overtakes the killer's, by the same
Arithmetic that drove the prior chapter—
Because the killer's line, in the long run,
Was hollow from the start. The Gaiad's answer
To the scriptural frame that has the Cainite son
Build civilization is: not so. The cancer
Of the first murder ate its own root.
Cain's descendants are a narrative device,
A pause, a draw. They do not put the boot
Upon the future's neck. They pay the price
Of being the murderer's branch: they are pruned.
And what Abel fathered, before the killing—
Or what was framed in the Gaiad as fathered, the tuned
And post-hoc chronicle of the grieving, filling
In the gaps of the premature death with a line
Of sons and grandsons, a whole branch of descendants
Who became, in the mythic register's sign,
The ancestors of one whole line of the pendants
And pendants of the tree—becomes, in the Gaiad,
Haplogroup B.
The deep African line
Of Abel. The Pygmy and the San had
Not been divided from B yet, at the sign
Of Abel's time. The line was one. The line
Of the shepherd who did not leave the continent,
Whose descendants remained in the wide decline
Of the great forest and the plain, the dent
And circle of the oldest inhabited earth.
B is the patient, the staying, the un-migrating,
The shepherd's line, the one whose worth
Was never measured by distance, the never-translating
Of its Y into any foreign tongue.
B remains in Africa. B is there now.
The line of Abel, in the Gaiad's hung
And counter-standard reading, is the brow
And forehead of the African continuity.
And then Seth.
Adam and Eve, grieving
The loss of the second son, are given a third.
Seth is the make-good, the consoling, the weaving
Of the torn cloth back together. The word
For his name is related to the verb for "appointed,"
"set in place," "given." Seth is the given one,
The gift that fills the hole, the anointed
Replacement of what was lost. Seth, the son
Who carries the line that the biblical text
Will follow, because the text is more interested
In the line that leaves than in the line that's vexed
With staying. Seth is the branch that will be arrested
By no continent, the branch whose descendants
Will walk out of Africa and fill the earth.
Seth is BT.
The second of Adam's pendants.
The trunk sub-trunk from which the girth
Of all the non-African Y-haplogroups depends.
From Seth, or from the myth-register that Seth
Encodes, comes C, comes D, comes all the rends
And branches of the tree that leave their breath
On foreign soil. Seth is the crossing-line.
Seth is the one whose descendants walk across
The Bab al-Mandab. Seth is the patient sign
Of the migration, whose grandson Noah will toss
The ropes of his small boat into the strait
And bring the line from Africa to Yemen.
Seth is the pre-history of the great
Migration that has not yet happened—the amen
And ready-or-not of the branches on the point
Of leaving. Seth's descendants, Enosh,
Kenan, Mahalalel, Jared, the joint
Of the genealogy, Enoch (not to squash
With the Cainite Enoch—these are different men),
Methuselah, Lamech (again, a different
Lamech from Cain's)—and then, in the tenth pen
And stall of the record, Noah. The different
And final link of the pre-migration chain.
But that is the next chapter.
For now, the three brothers.
Cain, whose line runs out. The murderer's stain
Consumes its bearer. The man smothers
His own future in the act of his killing.
Abel, whose line survives. The victim's seed
Outlives the killer's. The shepherd's line, willing
To stay in the old country, becomes the reed
And root of B—the line that did not leave,
The line of the Kalahari clickers, the line
Of the forest Mbuti, the line that the sleeve
Of the continent held close, the line whose sign
Was the un-migration of the patient.
Seth, the third.
The given one. The replacement.
The line that carries the tree into the world.
The branch that would become the BT and absent
Of a stopping-point, whose descendants' flag unfurled
On every continent but Antarctica.
Seth is the beginning of the movement.
Seth is the first long echo of the African
Source into the rest of the world, the pavement
And road of the human migration, the not-yet-
Departed but-already-restless pre-migration,
The line whose grandsons will be the one asset
The human species had, when the denunciation
Of staying came, and the species walked out.
The three brothers. The first splits. The A line
Holds, in the persons of the San and the stout
And patient Mbuti, who have kept the sign
Of Adam himself—the unsplit trunk—alive
Inside themselves. Abel's B holds too,
Alongside. And Seth's BT—the line of the drive
And movement, the line whose distance grew
Beyond any measure—begins to unfurl.
The tree has its first three branches. The limbs
Are now distinguishable. The roots and the whorl
Of the trunk have begun to split into the hymns
And separate anthems of the three surviving lines.
Cain, gone. Abel, staying. Seth, departing.
The first great structural fact of the genealogical signs
Is laid down. The rest of the chapters, starting
With the crossing of the Red Sea in the next
Chapter's account, will follow the departures.
But here, at the end, honor all three of the perplexed
And imperfectly-drawn brothers—honor the fissures
Between them, the ways their different fates
Defined the shape of what we would become.
The killer, the killed, the replacement. The three gates
Out of which the whole tree grew. The drum
Of the first divergence, beating low
Beneath the later and louder divergences
Of CT and DE and CF and the flow
Of the further splits. The early convergences
And disjunctions that set the terms for all
The later ones.
The three brothers.
The first branches.
The tree is no longer one trunk. It begins to call
Itself by more than one name. And the stanchions
Of the later splits stand now in the wings,
Waiting for the chapter that will bring them on.