In light of those developments, what do I do now? Should I mail this letter or tear it up? It won’t fall into your hands, of course, not a chance of that. Into whose, then?
Probably it’ll be picked up by someone who can’t even read English.
Why am I afraid it might fall into the wrong hands? I really don’t know. But there is a dark, secret struggle going on under the seemingly simple life of this Valley. I intend to find out just what it is. I’ll have to proceed cautiously though. A small voice tells me that I might be better off if I don’t know anything about this.
Anyway, to whom am I really writing these missives? To myself, probably, though I hope hopelessly that just possibly impossibly one might drift into the hands of someone I knew and loved or at least was fond of.
And yet, this very moment, as I stare across the water at the many people on the bank, I might be looking directly at the person to whom I’ve written one of these letters. But the ship is in the middle of The River just now, and I’m too far away to recognize anyone recognizable.
Great God, the faces I’ve seen in twenty years! Millions, far more than I ever saw on Earth. Some of the faces came into being three hundred thousand years ago or more. Undoubtedly, the faces of many of my ancestors, some of them Neanderthals. A certain number of Homo neanderthalis was absorbed by miscegenation into Homo sapiens, you know. And considering the flux and reflux of large groups through prehistory and history, migrations, invasions, slavery, individual travel, some, maybe many, of the Mongolian, Amerindian, Australoid, and Negro faces I’ve seen belong to my ancestors.
Consider this. Each generation of your ancestors, going back in time, doubles its number. You were born in 1925. You had two parents, born in 1900. (Yes, I know you were born in 1923 and your mother was forty when she bore you. But this is an ideal case, an average.)
Your parents’ parents were born in 1875. That makes four. Double your ancestors every twenty-five years. By 1800, you have thirty-two ancestors. Most of them didn’t even know each other, but they were “destined” to be your great-great-great-grandparents.
In 1700 a.d., you have five hundred twelve ancestors. In 1600 a.d. 8192 ancestors. In 1500 A.D., 131,072 ancestors. In 1400, 2,097,152. In 1300, 33,554,432. By 1200 A.D., you have 536,870,912 ancestors.
So do I. So does everybody. If the world population was, say, two billion in 1925 (I don’t remember what it was), then multiply that by the number of your ancestors in 1200 A.D. You get over one quadrillion. Impossible? Right.
I just happen to remember that in 1600 the estimated world population was five hundred million. In 1 a.d. , it was an estimated 138,000,000. So, the conclusion is obvious. There was a hell of a lot of incest, close and remote, going on in the past. Not to mention the present. Probably from the dawn of humankind. So, you and I are related. And, in fact, it may be possible that we’re all related, many times over. How many Chinese and black Africans born in 1925 were distant cousins of you and me? Plenty, I’d say.
So, the faces I see on both banks as I sail along are my cousins’. Hello, Hang Chow. Yiya, Bulabula. What’s happening, Hiawatha? Hail, Og, Son of Fire! But even if they knew this, they wouldn’t feel any more friendly toward me. Or vice versa. The most intense quarreling and the most vicious bloodletting take place in families. Civil wars are the worst wars. But then, since we’re all cousins, all wars are civil. Mighty uncivil, at the same time. The paradox of human relations. I’ll shoot your ass off, brother.
Mark Twain was right. Did you ever read his Extract from Captain Stormfield’s Visit to Heaven ? Old Stormfield was shocked when he got past the Pearly Gates because there were so many dark people. Like all of us pale Caucasians, he had envisioned Heaven as being full of white faces with here and there a few yellow, brown, and black ones. But it wasn’t that way. He’d forgotten that the dark-skinned peoples had always outnumbered the whites. In fact, for every white face he saw there were two dark ones. And that’s the way it is here. My hat is off to you, Mr. Twain. You told it like it was gonna be.