Before Adam by Jack London

bluff we found our new home most difficult of access

and quite hidden from any eye beneath.

There is little more of my tale to tell. Here the

Swift One and I lived and reared our family. And here

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my memories end. We never made another migration. I

never dream beyond our high, inaccessible cave. And

here must have been born the child that inherited the

stuff of my dreams, that had moulded into its being all

the impressions of my life–or of the life of

Big-Tooth, rather, who is my other-self, and not my

real self, but who is so real to me that often I am

unable to tell what age I am living in.

I often wonder about this line of descent. I, the

modern, am incontestably a man; yet I, Big-Tooth, the

primitive, am not a man. Somewhere, and by straight

line of descent, these two parties to my dual

personality were connected. Were the Folk, before

their destruction, in the process of becoming men? And

did I and mine carry through this process? On the other

hand, may not some descendant of mine have gone in to

the Fire People and become one of them? I do not know.

There is no way of learning. One thing only is

certain, and that is that Big-Tooth did stamp into the

cerebral constitution of one of his progeny all the

impressions of his life, and stamped them in so

indelibly that the hosts of intervening generations

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have failed to obliterate them.

There is one other thing of which I must speak before I

close. It is a dream that I dream often, and in point

of time the real event must have occurred during the

period of my living in the high, inaccessible cave. I

remember that I wandered far in the forest toward the

east. There I came upon a tribe of Tree People. I

crouched in a thicket and watched them at play. They

were holding a laughing council, jumping up and down

and screeching rude choruses.

Suddenly they hushed their noise and ceased their

capering. They shrank down in fear, and quested

anxiously about with their eyes for a way of retreat.

Then Red-Eye walked in among them. They cowered away

from him. All were frightened. But he made no attempt

to hurt them. He was one of them. At his heels, on

stringy bended legs, supporting herself with knuckles

to the ground on either side, walked an old female of

the Tree People, his latest wife. He sat down in the

midst of the circle. I can see him now, as I write

this, scowling, his eyes inflamed, as he peers about

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him at the circle of the Tree People. And as he peers

he crooks one monstrous leg and with his gnarly toes

scratches himself on the stomach. He is Red-Eye, the

atavism.

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