The
Legend Of Sleepy Hollow
by Washington Irving |
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About The Author: |
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Short Stories
The
Legend Of Sleepy Hollow |
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Washington
Irving (1783-1859)
Writer, called the "first American man of letters."
He is best known for the short stories "The Legend
of Sleepy Hollow" and "Rip Van Winkle."
The favourite and last of 11 children of an austere Presbyterian
father and a genial Anglican mother, young, frail Irving
grew up in an atmosphere of indulgence. He escaped a college
education, which his father required of his older sons,
but read intermittently at the law, notably in the office
of Josiah Ogden Hoffman, with whose pretty daughter Matilda
he early fell in love. He wrote a series of whimsically
satirical essays over the signature of Jonathan Oldstyle,
Gent., published in Peter Irving's newspaper, the Morning
Chronicle, in 1802-03. He made several trips up the Hudson,
another into Canada for his health, and took an extended
tour of Europe in 1804-06.
On his return he passed the bar examination late in 1806
and soon set up as a lawyer. But during 1807-08 his chief
occupation was to collaborate with his brother William
and James K. Paulding in the writing of a series of 20
periodical essays entitled Salmagundi. Concerned primarily
with passing phases of contemporary society, the essays
retain significance as an index to the social milieu.
His A History of New York . . . by Diedrich Knickerbocker
(1809) was a comic history of the Dutch regime in New
York, prefaced by a mock-pedantic account of the world
from creation onward. Its writing was interrupted in April
1809 by the sudden death of Matilda Hoffman, as grief
incapacitated him. In 1811 he moved to Washington, D.C.,
as a lobbyist for the Irving brothers' hardware-importing
firm, but his life seemed aimless for some years. He prepared
an American edition of Thomas Campbell's poems, edited
the Analectic Magazine, and acquired a staff colonelcy
during the War of 1812. In 1815 he went to Liverpool to
look after the interests of his brothers' firm. In London
he met Sir Walter Scott, who encouraged him to renewed
effort. The result was The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon,
Gent (1819-20), a collection of stories and essays that
mix satire and whimsicality with fact and fiction. Most
of the book's 30-odd pieces concern Irving's impressions
of England, but six chapters deal with American subjects.
Of these, the tales "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow"
and "Rip Van Winkle" have been called the first
American short stories. They are both Americanized versions
of German folktales. The main character of "Rip Van
Winkle" is a henpecked husband who sleeps for 20
years and awakes as an old man to find his wife dead,
his daughter happily married, and America now an independent
country. The tremendous success of The Sketch Book in
both England and the United States assured Irving that
he could live by his pen. In 1822 he produced Bracebridge
Hall, a sequel to The Sketch Book. He traveled in Germany,
Austria, France, Spain, the British Isles, and later in
his own country.
Early in 1826 he accepted the invitation of Alexander
H. Everett to attach himself to the American legation
in Spain, where he wrote his Columbus (1828), followed
by The Companions of Columbus (1831). Meanwhile, Irving
had become absorbed in the legends of the Moorish past
and wrote A Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada (1829)
and The Alhambra (1832), a Spanish counterpart of The
Sketch Book.
After a 17-year absence Irving returned to New York in
1832, where he was warmly received. He made a journey
west and produced in rapid succession A Tour of the Prairies
(1835), Astoria (1836), and The Adventures of Captain
Bonneville (1837). Except for four years (1842-46) as
minister to Spain, Irving spent the remainder of his life
at his home, "Sunnyside," in Tarrytown, on the
Hudson River, where he devoted himself to literary pursuits.
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