The Savage Tales of Solomon Kane (Cont.): The Platypus Reads Part CCLVI
The Return of Sir Richard Grenville The Sir Richard Grenville mentioned in the poem is probably this one who died fighting against the Spanish. This poem is swift and eerie -the sort of thing that wouldn't stand by itself but helps add color to an already established world. This sort of multi-genre world-building is reminiscent of what Tolkien was attempting at the same time period in his unpublished Silmarillion . Wings in the Night As predicted, Howard uses the wilderness of Africa to test the faith of Solomon Kane and in the face of overwhelming suffering it for a moment breaks. There are some key points to notice here: The first is that the interruption of Kane's faith allows Howard's real beliefs to come through: the triumph of Aryan man through a violent process of natural selection (Blech!). There's one horrid little paragraph here that reads like something straight out of Hitler's Reich. The sad thing is that these views were considered r...