The story is a lightly fictionalized exposition of HPL’s own social, ethical, and aesthetic philosophy. It is not even so much a story as a parable or philosophical diatribe. He attacks literary realism (“He did not dissent when they told him that the animal pain of a stuck pig or dyspeptic ploughman in real life is a greater thing than the peerless beauty of Narath with its hundred carven gates and domes of chalcedony”), conventional religion (“It wearied Carter to see how solemnly people tried to make earthly reality out of old myths which every step of their boasted science confuted”), and bohemians (“their lives were dragged malodorously out in pain, ugliness, and disproportion, yet filled with a ludicrous pride at having escaped from something no more unsound than that which still held them”). The structural framework of the story at this point—Carter samples in succession a variety of aesthetic, religious, and personal experiences in an attempt to lend meaning or interest to his life— may have been derived from J.K.Huysmans’
The story is also, as Kenneth W.Faig, Jr. has determined, a fictionalized account of HPL’s visit, in October 1926, to the western Rhode Island town of Foster, the home of his maternal ancestors. Details of topography, character names (Benijah Corey is probably an adaptation of two names: Benejah Place, the owner of the farm across the road from the house where HPL stayed, and Emma [Corey] Phillips, the widow of Walter Herbert Phillips, whose grave HPL probably saw),
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and other similarities make this conclusion unshakable. In some ways, “The Silver Key” is a retelling of “The Tomb,” in which Jervas Dudley discovers in his attic a physical key that allows him to unlock the secrets of the past.
In regard to the other Randolph Carter stories, “The Silver Key” portrays Carter’s life from his childhood to the age of fifty-four, at which point he doubles back on his own timeline and reverts to boyhood.
See Kenneth W.Faig, Jr., “‘The Silver Key’ and Lovecraft’s Childhood,”
Simes.
In “The Disinterment,” the butler of Marshall Andrews who is later killed by the narrator, a patient whom Andrews had been treating.
“Simple Speller’s Tale, The.”
Poem (56 lines); probably written in early 1915. First published in the
Single,———.
The narrator of “The Tree on the Hill” who discovers and photographs a strange tree in a landscape lit by three suns.
Slater (Slaader), Joe.