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ALONG THE HUDSON

WITH WASHINGTON

IRVING

WALLACE BRUCE

ALONG THE HUDSON

WITH WASHINGTON

IRVING

By WALLACE BRUCE

PRESS OF THE A. V. HAIGHT COMPANY POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.

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Copyright 1913 by Wallace Bruce

IED FROM IQHT OFFIOI

OAAi 7 ' /$//,

A World-wide Welcome

Hail stalely ship of worthy name!

Where cherished memories fondly brood, Proclaiming wide our Hudson's fame;

Ay more; a world-wide Brotherhood. With hearty cheer we welcome thee,

Washington Irving' s flag unfurled. Whose genius rules from sea to sea

Whose love enriches all the world.

Ring happy bells! Manhattan greet

Our "Irving" at thy portal now; No other name so fair and meet,

Your storied record to endow. Ring joyous bells along the way!

Swing icide and far a welcome free! The glorious Hudson wakes today

With grateful music all for tliee.

Hail! "Irving" Hail! no name but thine

Could blend and bind such memories true; Through him long centuries entwine

The Highlands bold and Catskills blue. From Sunny side to mountain stream

Where "Laughing Water" gently plays Let bells salute Van Winkle's dream

And crown the land with laurel bays.

CONTENTS

Along the Hudson 5

Irving's First Voyage by Sloop in 1800 . 9

His Account of Hendrick Hudson's Dis- covery 13

Peter Stuyvesant's Journey . ... 29

Patroon Van Rensellear's Trip from New

York to Albany 37

Anthony Van Corlear Diplomatic Mission 99

Oloffe Van Kortland's Dream ... 42

Legend of Sleepy Hollow . ... 44

Rip Van Winkle 78

Sunnyside The Home of Many Mem- ories 109

The Dreamland of Pocantico and Sleepy

Hollow 114

Washington Irving at Home and Abroad 117

Along the Hudson With Washington Irving

Through a Realm of Beauty, Romance and History with our sweetest writer and noblest voyager

For many years it has been the delight of our Hudson River dwellers and of all world- wide readers in every state and in many lands, to make delightful excursions of fancy "Along the Hudson with Washington Irving." It was, therefore, a beautiful thought of the Hudson River Day Line to convert this fancy into fact and to make our journeys "Along the Hudson with Washington Irving, "a de- lightful reality by the launching of a noble steamer bearing our illustrious writer's name, so that we all become today real voyagers with him, and as it were, personally conducted among the mountains, valleys and streams, illuminated and glorified by his sunny genius and eventful life.

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It was also a splendid idea of the Hudson River Day Line management to construct and name their three superb steamers in natural and historic sequence as related to the river, to wit:

"Hendrick Hudson" Our Discoverer.

"Robert Fulton" Our Inventor.

"Washington Irving" Our Portray er and Voyager.

From Washington Irving's much loved Manhattan to the historic Highlands and the romantic Catskills, the very breezes are vo- cal with his utterances, and we esteem it a great privilege by the mere crossing of a poetic "gang-plank of memory" to pass at once from Dreamland to Reality and thereby spend a delightful day in his companionship and listen to his cheery words which still flow sweetly from his own lips as he recounts to us the ro- mance and story of our noble River.

"I thank God," exclaims Washington Irving "that I was born on the banks of the Hudson, for I fancy I can trace much that is good and pleasant in my heterogeneous compound to my early companionship with this glorious river.

It will be remembered that a short walk from his Birthplace, 119 William St., would take the active lad in three or four minutes through the old Trinity churchyard or across open

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fields from his very doorstep to the bank of the river; so that all Manhattan was in fact his dooryard and the entire valley of the Hudson his dream land. It may now also be fittingly recalled that Washington Irving seemed especially foreordained by ancestry, home and association for the noble mission that awaited him. On his eventful birthday April 5, 1783, his patriotic mother said to his father "General Washington's great work is now completed and we will call our little boy Washington Irving." The worthy woman who had distributed food to the starving soldiers of the American Revolution cruelly confined in the loathsome British Prison ships of New York divined the right name for her little boy in the cradle; this happy christening led to an early and memorable meeting of the dis- tinguished General and his little namesake, for Washington Irving now tells us how

"A young Scotch maid servant of the fam- ily, struck with the enthusiasm which every- where greeted General Washington's arrival in New York, determined to present the child to his distinguished namesake. Accordingly she followed him one morning and leading by the hand the lad who had scarce outgrown his virgin trousers, said "Please, your honor, here's a bairn was named after you." In the

estimation of Lizzie, for so she was called, few claims of kindred could be stronger than this. Washington did not disdain the delicate affinity, and placing his hand on the head of her little charge, gave him his blessing."

The distinguished hero of Yorktown and the first President of our Republic little dreamed that the good Scotch nurse led by the hand that morning one destined to laurel his own history, to depict the great deeds of the Revolutionary struggle and to transmit, as it were, by personal touch, a work which in reverent love and sympathetic narration would stand alone, not only in American literature, but also in the annals of the world's history of freedom.

Were I an artist I know of no finer group in our entire American story than this of the great General and the bright eyed lad at- tended by his nurse in her Tartan plaid stand- ing at the doorway of the old Trinity Church appropriately framed amid the old-time pic- turesque buildings of the lower Broadway of our Revolutionary days. That greeting and blessing was a "laying on of hands" never to be forgotten and a noble dedication for the great work the lad was to accomplish.

Irving's First Voyage

As the steamer lines are cast off at Des-

brosses Street pier, Washington Irving

naturally reverts to the old-time

days, and his great voyage

Along the Hudson

by sloop in 1800

My first voyage up the Hudson was made in early boyhood, before steamboats and rail- roads had annihilated time and space. A voyage to Albany then was equal to a voyage to Europe at present, and took almost as much time. \^,e enjoyed the beauties of the river in those days; the features of nature were no all iumbled together, nor the towns and vil- lages huddled one into the other by railroad speed as they are now.

I was to make the voyage under the pro- tection of a relative of mature age; one ex- perienced in the river. His first care was to look out for a favorite sloop and captain, in which there was great choice.

The constant voyaging in the river craft by the best families of New York and Albany made the merits of captains and sloops matters of notoriety and discussion in both cities. The captains were mediums of communication be- tween separated friends and families. On the arrival of one of them at either place he had messages to deliver and commissions to exe- cute which took him from house to house. Some of the ladies of the family had, perad- venture, made a voyage on board of his sloop, and experienced from him that protecting care which is always remembered with gratitude by female passengers. In this way the cap- tains of Albany sloops were personages of more note in the community than captains of European packets or steamships at the present day. A sloop was at length chosen; but she had to complete her freight and secure a suf- ficient number of passengers. Days were con- sumed in "drumming up" a cargo. This was a tormenting delay to me who was about to make my first voyage, and who, boy-like had packed up my trunk on the first mention of the expedition. How often that trunk had to be unpacked and repacked before we sailed

What a time of intense delight was that first sail through the Highlands! I sat on the deck as we slowly tided along at the foot of

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those stern mountains, and gazed with wonder and admiration at cliffs impending far above me, crowned with forests, with eagles sailing and screaming around them; or listened to the unseen stream dashing down precipices or beheld rock, and tree, and cloud, and sky reflected in the glassy stream of the river. And then how solemn and thrilling the scene as we anchored at night at the foot of these moun- tains, clothed with overhanging forests; and everything grew dark and mysterious; and I heard the plaintive note of the whippoor- will from the mountain-side, or was startled now and then by the sudden leap and heavy splash of the sturgeon.

But of all the scenery of the Hudson, the Kaatskill Mountains had the most witching effect on my boyish imagination. Never shall I forget the effect upon me of the first view of them predominating over a wide ex- tent of country, part wild, woody, and rugged part softened away into all the graces of cul- tivation. As we slowly floated along, I lay on the deck and watched them through a long summer's day; undergoing a thousand muta- tions under the magical effects of atmosphere sometimes seeming to approach; at other times to recede; now almost melting into hazy distance, now burnished by the setting sun,

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until, in the evening, they printed themselves against the glowing sky in the deep purple of an Italian landscape.

"I am here recalling my first voyaging amid Hudson scenery and can say that it has been my lot, in the course of a somewhat wander- ing life, to behold some of the rivers of the old world, most renowned in history and song, yet none have been able to efface or dim the pictures of my native stream thus early stamp- ed upon my memory. My heart would ever revert to them with a filial feeling, and a re- currence of the joyous associations of boy- hood; and such recollections are, in fact, the true fountains of youth which keep the heart from growing old.

To me the Hudson is full of storied associa- tions, connected as it is with some of the hap- piest portions of my life. Each striking fea- ture brings to mind some early adventure or enjoyment; some favorite companion who shared it with me; some fair object, perchance, of youthful admiration, who, like a star, may have beamed her allotted time and passed away.

l%

Washington Irving

Now proceeds to give us his account of "Hendrick Hudson's Discovery of Our River." After refreshing his mem- ory with a hasty glance at the early pages of Old Knick- erbocker's History of New York

In the ever-memorable year of our Lord, 1609, on a Saturday morning, the five:and- twentieth day of March, old style, did that "worthy and irrecoverable discoverer (as he has justly been called), Master Hudson," set sail from Holland in a stout vessel called the "Half-Moon," being employed by the Dutch East India Company, to seek a northwest passage to China.

Henry (or, as the Dutch historians call him, Hendrick) Hudson was a seafaring man of renown, who had learned to smoke tobacco

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under Sir Walter Raleigh, and is said to have been the first to introduce it into Holland, which gained him much popularity in that country, and caused him to find great favor in the eyes of their High Mightinesses, the Lords States General, and also of the honorable West India Company. He was a short, square, brawny old gentleman, with a double chin, a mastiff mouth, and a broad copper nose, which was supposed in those days to have ac- quired its fiery hue from the constant neigh- borhood of his tobacco pipe.

He wore a true Andrea Ferrara, tucked in a leathern belt, and a commodore's cocked hat on one side of his head. He was remarkable for always jerking up his breeches when he gave out his orders, and his voice sounded not unlike the brattling of a tin trumpet, owing to the number of hard northwesters which he had swallowed in the course of his seafaring.

Such was Hendrick Hudson, of whom we have heard so much, and know so little; and I have been thus particular in his description for the benefit of modern painters and statu- aries, that they may represent him as he was, and not, according to their common custom with modern heroes, make him look like Ceas- ar, or Marcus Aurelius, or the Apollo of Bel- videre.

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Robert Juet was an old comrade and early schoolmate of the great Hudson, with whom he had often played truant and sailed chip boats in a neighboring pond, when they were little boys: from whence it is said that the commodore first derived his bias towards a seafaring life.

To this universal genius are we indebted for many particulars concerning this voyage; of which he wrote a history, at the request of the commodore, who had an unconquerable aver- sion to writing himself, from having received so many floggings about it when at school. To supply the deficiencies of master Juet's journal, which is written with true log-book brevity, I have availed myself of divers family traditions, handed down from my great-great- grandfather, who accompanied the expedition in the capacity of cabin-boy. From all that I can learn, few incidents worthy of remark happened in the voyage.

Suffice it to say, the voyage was prosperous and tranquil; the crew, being a patient people, much given to slumber and vacuity, and but little troubled with the disease of thinking, a malady of the mind, which is the sure breed- er of discontent, every man was allowed to sleep quietly at his post unless the wind blew. True, it is, some slight disaffection was shown

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on two or three occasions, at certain unreas- onable conduct of Commodore Hudson. Thus, for instance, he forbore to shorten sail when the wind was light, and the weather serene, which was considered among the most expe- rienced Dutch seamen as certain weather- breeders, or prognostics that the weather would change for the worse. He likewise prohibited the seamen from wearing more than five jackets and six pair of breeches, under pre- tense of rendering them more alert; and no man was permitted to go aloft and hand in sails with a pipe in his mouth, as is the invariable Dutch custom at the present day. All these grievances, though they might ruffle for a moment the constitutional tranquillity of the honest Dutch tars, made but transient im- pression;— they ate hugely and slept immeas- urably; and being under the especial guidance of Providence, the ship was safely conducted to the coast of America; where, after sundry unimportant touchings and standings off and on, she at length, on the fourth day of Septem- ber, entered that majestic bay which at this day expands its ample bosom before the city of New York, and which had never before been visited by any European.

True it is and I am not ignorant of the fact that in a certain apocryphal book of

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voyages, compiled by one Hakluyt, is to be found a letter written to Francis the First, by one Giovanna, or John Verazzani, on which some writers are inclined to found a be- lief that this delightful bay had been visited nearly a century previous to the voyage of the enterprising Hudson. Now this (albeit it has met with the countenance of certain very ju- dicious and learned men) I hold in utter dis- belief, and that for various good and substan- tial reasons: First, Because on strict exami- nation it will be found that the description given by this Verazzani applies about as well to the bay of New York as it does to my night- cap. Secondly, because that this John Ver- azzani, for whom I already begin to feel a most bitter enmity, is a native of Florence; and everybody knows the crafty wiles of these losel Florentines, by which they filched away the laurels from the brows of the immortal Colon (vulgarly called Columbus), and be- stowed them on their officious townsman, Amerigo Vespucci; and I make no doubt they are equally ready to rob the illustrious Hud- son of the credit of discovering this beautiful island, adorned by the city of New York, and placing it beside their usurped discovery of South America. And thirdly, I award my decision in favor of the pretensions of

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Hendrick Hudson, inasmuch as his expedition sailed from Holland, being truly and absolute- ly a Dutch enterprise; and though all the proofs in the world were introduced on the other side, I would set them at naught, as undeserving my attention. If these three reasons be not sufficient to satisfy every burgher of this ancient city, all I can say is, they are degenerate descendants from their venerable Dutch ancestors, and totally unworthy the trouble of convincing. Thus, therefore, the title of Hendrick Hudson to his renowned dis- covery is fully vindicated.

It has been traditionary in our family, that when the great navigator was first blessed with a view of this enchanting island, he was observed, for the first and only time in his life, to exhibit strong symptons of astonish- ment and admiration. He is said to have turn- ed to Master Juet, and uttered these remark- able words, while he pointed towards this par- adise of the new world, "See! there!" and, thereupon, as was always his way when he was uncommonly pleased, he did puff out such clouds of dense tobacco smoke, that in one minute the vessel was out of sight of land, and master Juet was fain to wait until the winds dispersed this impenetrable fog.

It was indeed, as my great-grandfather

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used to say, though in truth I never heard him, for he died, as might be expected be- fore I was born "It was indeed a spot on which the eye might have revelled forever, in ever new and never-ending beauties." The island of Mannahata spread wide before them, like some sweet vision of fancy, or some fair creation of industrious magic. Its hills of smiling green swelled gently one above an- other, crowned with lofty trees of luxuriant growth; some pointing their tapering foliage towards the clouds, which were gloriously transparent; and others loaded with verdant burden of clambering vines, bowing their branches to the earth, that was covered with flowers. On the gentle declivities of the hills were scattered in gay profusion, the dogwood, the sumach, and the wild brier, whose scarlet berries and white blossoms glowed brightly among the deep green of the surrounding fol- iage; and here and there a curling column of smoke, rising from the little glens that op- ened along the shore, seemed to promise the weary voyagers a welcome at the hands of their fellow-creatures. As they stood gazing with entranced attention on the scene before them, a red man, crowned with feathers, is- sued from one of these glens, and after con- templating in wonder the gallant ship, as she

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sat like a stately swan swimming on a silver lake, sounded the war-whoop, and bounded into the woods like a wild deer, to the utter as- tonishment of the phlegmatic Dutchmen, who had never heard such a noise, or witnessed such a caper in their whole lives.

Of the transactions of our adventurers with the savages, and how the latter smoked copper pipes and ate dried currants; how they brought great store of tobacco and oysters; how they shot one of the ship's crew, and how he was buried, I shall say nothing; being that I consider them unimportant to my history. After tarrying a few days in the bay, in order to refresh themselves after their seafaring, our voyagers weighed anchor, to explore a mighty river which emptied into the bay. This river, it is said, was known among the savages by the name of the Shatemuch, though we are assured in an excellent little history published in 1674, by John Josselyn, Gent, that it was called the Mohegan, and master Richard Bloome, who wrote some time afterwards, asserts the same, so that I very much incline in favor of the opinion of these two honest gentlemen. This river is likewise laid down in Ogilby's map as Manhattan Noordt Montaigne and Mauritius river. Be this as it may, up this river did the

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adventurous Hendrick proceed, little doubting but it would turn out to be the much looked- for passage to China!

The journal goes on to make mention of divers interviews between the crew and the natives in the voyage up the river; but as they would be impertinent to my history, I shall pass them over in silence, except the following dry joke, played off by the old commodore and his school-fellow, Robert Juet, which does such vast credit to their experi- mental philosophy, that I cannot refrain from inserting it. "Our master and his mate de- termined to try some of the chiefe men of the country, whether they had any treacherie in them. So they tooke them downe into the cabin, and gave them so much wine and aqua vitae, that they were all merrie; and one of them had his wife with him which sate so modestly, as any of our countrey women would do in a strange place. In the end, one of them was drunke, which had been aborde of our ship all the time that he had been there, and that was strange to them, for they could not tell how to take it."

He then proceeded on his voyage with great self-complacency. After sailing, however, above an hundred miles up the river, he found the watery world around him began to grow

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more shallow and confined, the current more rapid, and perfectly fresh, phenomena not uncommon in the ascent of rivers, but which puzzled the honest Dutchmen prodigiously. A consultation was therefore called, and hav- ing deliberated full six hours, they were brought to a determination by the ship's running aground, whereupon they unanimously con- cluded, that there was but little chance of getting to China in this direction. A boat, however, was despatched to explore higher up the river, which, on its return, confirmed the opinion; upon this the ship was warped off and put about, with great difficulty, be- ing, like most of her sex, exceedingly hard to govern; and the adventurous Hudson, ac- cording to the account of my great-great- grandfather, returned down the river with a prodigious flea in his ear?

Being satisfied that there was little like- lihood of getting to China, unless, like the blind man, he returned from whence he set out, and took a fresh start, he forthwith re- crossed the sea to Holland, where he was re- ceived with great welcome by the honorable East India Company, who were very much rejoiced to see him come back safe with their ship; and at a large and respectable meeting of the first merchants and burgomasters of

Amsterdam, it was unanimously determined that as a munificent reward for the eminent services he had performed, and the important discovery he had made, the great river Mo- hegan shall be called after his name and it continues to be called Hudson river unto this very day.

Letters-patent were granted by govern- ment to an association of merchants, called the West India Company, for the exclusive trade on Hudson river, on which they erected a trading-house, called Fort Aurania, or Orange, from whence did spring the great city of Albany.

It was some three or four years after the return of the immortal Hendrick, that a crew of honest, Low-Dutch colonists set sail from the city of Amsterdam for the shores of Amer- ica. The " Goede Vrouw" made out to accom- plish her voyage in a very few months, and came to anchor at the mouth of the Hudson a little to the east of Gibbet Island.

Here, lifting up their eyes, they beheld, on what is at present called the Jersey shore, a small Indian village, pleasantly embowered in a grove of spreading elms, and the natives all collected on the beach, gazing in stupid admiration at the "Goede Vrouw." A boat was immediately dispatched to enter into a treaty

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with them, and approaching the shore, hailed them through a trumpet, in the most friendly terms; but so horribly confounded were these poor savages at the tremendous and uncouth sound of the Low-Dutch language, that they one and all took to their heels, and scampered over the Bergen hills; nor did they stop until they had buried themselves, head and ears, in the marshes on the other side, where they all miserably perished to a man; and their bones, being collected and decently covered by the Tammany Society of that day, formed that singular mound called Rattlesnake Hill, which rises out of the center of the salt marshes a little to the east of the Newark Causeway. Animated by this unlooked-for victory ,our valiant heroes sprang ashore in triumph, took possession of the soil as conquerors, in the name of their High Mightinesses the Lords States General; and, marching fearlessly forward, car- ried the village of Communipaw by storm, notwithstanding that it was vigorously de- fended by some half score of old squaws and papooses. On looking about them they were so transported with the excellencies of the place, that they had very little doubt the blessed St. Nicholas had guided them thither, as the very spot whereon to settle their col- ony. The softness of the soil was wonderfully

adapted to the driving of piles; the swamps and marshes around them afforded ample oppor- tunities for the constructing of dykes and dams; the shallowness of the shore was pe- culiarly favorable to the building of docks; in a word, this spot abounded with all the req- uisites for the foundation of a great Dutch city. On making a faithful report, therefore, to the crew of the "Goede Vrouw,"they one and all determined that this was the destined end of their voyage. Accordingly they de- scended from the "Goede Vrouw," men, women, and children, in goodly groups, as did the animals of yore from the ark, and formed them- selves into a thriving settlement, which they called by the Indian name Communipaw.

As all the world is doubtless acquainted with Communipaw, it may seem somewhat superfluous to treat of it in the present work; but my readers will please to recollect, not- withstanding it is my chief desire to satisfy the present age, yet I write likewise for pos- terity, and have to consult the understanding and curiosity of some half a score of centuries yet to come, by which time, perhaps, were it not for this invaluable history, the great Communipaw, like Babylon, Carthage, Nine- vah and other great cities, might be perfectly extinct, sunk and forgotten in its own mud,

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its inhabitants turned into oysters, and even its situation a fertile subject of learned con- troversy and hard-headed investigation among indefatigable historians. Let me then piously rescue from oblivion the humble relics of a place, which was the egg from whence was hatched the mighty city of New York!

Communipaw is at present but a small vil- lage, pleasantly situated, among rural scenery, on that beauteous part of the Jersey shore which was known in ancient legends by the name of Pavonia, and commands a grand prospect of the superb bay of New York. It is within but half an hour's sail of the latter place, provided you have a fair wind, and may be distinctly seen from the city. Nay, it is a well-known fact, which I can testify from my own experience, that on a clear, still sum- mer evening, you may hear, from the Battery of New York, the obstreperous peals of broad mouthed laughter of the Dutch negroes at Communipaw, who, like most other negroes are famous for their risible powers.

Communipaw, in short, is one of the numerous little villages in the vicinity of this most beau- tiful of cities, which are so many strongholds and fastnesses, whither the primitive manners of our Dutch forefathers have retreated, and where they are cherished with devout and

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scrupulous strictness. The language likewise continues unadulterated by barbarous inno- vations; and so critically correct is the village schoolmaster in his dialect, that his reading of a Low-Dutch psalm has much the same effect on the nerves as the filing of a hand saw.

The crew of the "Goede Vrouw" being soon reinforced by fresh importations from Hol- land, the settlement went jollily on, increas- ing in magnitude and prosperity. The Indians were much given to long talks, and the Dutch to long silence; in this particular, therefore, they accommodated each other completely. The chiefs would make long speeches about the big bull, the Wabash, and the Great Spirit, to which the others would listen very at- tentively, smoke their pipes, and grunt yah, myhn-her, whereat the poor savages were wondrously delighted. They instructed the new settlers in the best art of curing and smok- ing tobacco, while the latter, in return, made them drunk with true Hollands and then taught them the art of making bargains.

As to the honest burghers of Communipaw, likewise men and sound philosophers, they never look beyond their pipes, nor trouble their heads about any affairs out of their im- mediate neighborhood; so that they live in a profound and enviable ignorance of all the

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troubles, anxieties, and revolutions of this dis- tracted planet. I am even told that many among them do verily believe that Holland, of which they have heard so much from tradi- tion, is situated somewhere on Long Island, that Spiking-devil and the Narrows are the two ends of the world, that the country is still under the dominion of their High Mightinesses, and that the city of New York still goes by the name of Nieuw Amsterdam. They meet every Saturday afternoon at the only tavern in the place, which bears as a sign a square-headed likeness of the Prince of Orange, where they smoke a silent pipe, by way of promoting social conviviality, and invariably drink a mug of cider to the success of Admiral Van Tromp, who they imagine is still sweeping the British channel, with a broom at his mast-head.

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Peter Stuyvesant's Journey as narrated by Irving

Here and there might be seen a rude wig- wam perched among the cliffs of the moun- tains, with its curling column of smoke mount- ing in the transparent atmosphere, but so loftily situated that the whoopings of the sav- age children, gambolling on the margin of the dizzy heights, fell almost as faintly on the ear as the notes of the lark when lost in the azure vault of heaven. Now and then, from the beetling brown of some precipice, the wild deer would look timidly down upon the splen- did pageant as it passed below, and then, toss- ing his antlers in the air, would bound away into the thickest of the forest.

Through such scenes did the stately vessel of Peter Stuyvesant pass. Now did they skirt the bases of the rocky heights of Jersey, which spring up like everlasting walls, reach- ing from the waves unto the heavens, and were fashioned, if tradition may be believed, in times along past, by the mighty spirit

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Manetho, to protect his favorite abodes from the unhallowed eyes of mortals. Now did they career it gayly across the vast expanse of Tappen Bay, whose wide-extended shores present a variety of delectable scenery, here the bold promontory, crowned with em- bowering trees, advancing into the bay, there the long woodland slope, sweeping up from the shore in rich luxuriance, and termi- nating in the upland precipice, while at a distance a long waving line of rocky heights threw their gigantic shades across the water. Now would they pass where some modest little interval, opening among these stupend- ous scenes, yet retreating as it were for pro- tection into the embraces of the neighboring mountains, displayed a rural paradise, fraught with sweet and pastoral beauties, the velvet- tufted lawn, the bushy copse, the tinkling rivulet, stealing through the fresh and vivid verdure, on whose banks was situated some little Indian village, or, peradventure, the rude cabin of some solitary hunter.

The different periods of the revolving day seemed each, with cunning magic, to diffuse a different charm over the scene. Now would the jovial sun break gloriously from the east blazing from the summits of the hills, and sparkling the landscape with a thousand dewy

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gems; while along the borders of the river were seen the heavy masses of mist, which like midnight caitiffs disturbed at his approach, made a sluggish retreat, rolling in sullen re- luctance up the mountains. At such times all was brightness, and life, and gayety, the atmosphere was of an indescribable pureness and transparency,— the birds broke forth in wanton madrigals, and the freshening breezes wafted the vessel merrily on her course. But when the sun set amid a flood of glory in the west, mantling the heavens and the earth with a thousand gorgeous dyes, then all was calm, and silent, and magnificent. The late swell- ing sail hung lifelessly against the mast; the seaman, with folded arms, leaned against the shrouds, lost in that involuntary musing which the sober grandeur of nature commands in the rudest of her children. The vast bosom of the Hudson was like an unruffled mirror, reflecting the golden hue of the heavens, ex- cepting that now and then a bark canoe would steal across its surface, filled with painted savages, whose gay feathers glared brightly as perchance a lingering ray of the setting sun gleamed upon them from the western moun- tains.

But when the hour of twilight spread its majestic mists around, then did the face of

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nature assume a thousand fugitive charms, which to the worthy heart that seeks enjoy- ment in the glorious works of its Maker are inexpressibly captivating. The mellow, dubi- ous light that prevailed just served to tinge with illusive colors the softened features of the scenery. The deceived but delighted eye sought vainly to discern in the broad masses of shade the separating line between the land and water, or to distinguish the fading objects that seemed sinking into choas. Now did the busy fancy supply the feebleness of vision, pro- ducing with industrious craft a fairy creation of her own. Under her plastic want the bar- ren rocks frowned upon the watery waste in the semblance of lofty towers and high em- battled castles, trees assumed the direful forms of mighty giants, and the inaccessible summits of the mountains seemed peopled with a thousand shadowy beings.

Thus happily did they pursue their course, until they entered upon those awful defiles denominated the Highlands, where it would seem that the gigantic Titans had erst waged their impious war with heaven, piling up cliffs on cliffs, and hurling vast masses of rock in wild confusion. But in sooth very different is the history of these cloud-capt mountains. These in ancient days, before the Hudson

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poured its waters from the lakes, formed one vast prison, within whose rocky bosom the omnipotent Manetho confined the rebellious spirits who repined at his control. Here, bound in adamantine chains, or jammed in rifted pines, or crushed by ponderous rocks, they groaned for many an age. At length the con- quering Hudson, in its career towards the ocean, burst open their prison-house, rolling its tide triumphantly through the stupendous ruins.

Still, however, do many of them lurk about their old abodes; and these it is, according to venerable legends, that cause the echoes which resound throughout these awful solitudes, which are nothing but their angry clamors when any noise disturbs the profoundness of their repose. For when the elements are agi- tated by tempest, when the winds are up and the thunder rolls, then horrible is the yelling and howling of these troubled spirits, making the mountains to rebellow with their hideous uproar; for at such times it is said that they think the great Manetho is returning once more to plunge them in gloomy caverns, and renew their intolerable captivity.

But all these fair and glorious scenes were lost upon the gallant Stuyvesant; naught oc- cupied his mind but thoughts of iron war, and

pround anticipations of hardy deeds of arms. Neither did his honest crew trouble their heads with any romantic speculations of the kind. The pilot at the helm quietly smoked his pipe, thinking of nothing either past, present or to come; those of his comrades who were not industriously smoking under the hatches were listening with open mouths to Antony Van Corlear.

And now I am going to tell a fact, which I doubt much my readers will hesitate to be- lieve; but if they do, they are welcome not to believe a word in this whole history, for nothing it contains is more true. It must be known then that the nose of Antony the trumpeter was of a very lusty size, strutting boldly from his countenance like a mountain of Golconda; being sumptuouslybedecked with rubies and other precious stones, the true regalia of a king of good fellows, which jolly Bacchus grants to all who bouse it heartily at the flagon. Now, thus it happened, that bright and early in the morning, the good Antony, having washed his burly visage, was leaning over the quarter-railing of the galley, contemplating it in the glassy wave below. Just at this moment the illustrious sun, break- ing in all its splendor from behind a high bluff of the highlands, did dart one of his most

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potent beams full upon the refulgent nose of the sounder of brass the reflection of which shot straightway down, hissing-hot, into the water, and killed a mighty sturgeon that was sport- ing beside the vessel! This huge monster, being with infinite labor hoisted on board, furnished a luxurious repast to all the crew, being ac- counted of excellent flavor, excepting about the wound, where it smacked a little of brim- stone; and this, on my veracity, was the first time that ever sturgeon was eaten in these parts by Christian people.

When this astonishing miracle came to be make known to Peter Stuyvesant, and that he tasted of the unknown fish, he, as may well be supposed, marvelled exceedingly; and as a monument thereof, he gave the name An- tony's Nose to a stout promontory in the neighborhood; and it has continued to be called Antony's Nose ever since that time.

The good people of New Amsterdam crowd- ed down to the Battery, that blest resort, from whence so many a tender prayer has been wafted, so many a fair hand waved, so many a tearful look been cast by lovesick dam- sel, after the lessening bark, bearing her ad- venturous swain to distant climes! Here the populace watched with straining eyes the gallant squadron, as it slowly floated down

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the bay, and when the intervening land at the Narrows shut it from their sight, gradually dispersed with silent tongues and downcast countenances.

The Journey of Van Rensellaer the

Patroon from New York to Albany

as narrated by Irving

One day when Wouter Van T wilier and his counsellors were smoking and pondering. . over the affairs of the province they were roused by the sound of a cannon. Sallying forth they beheld a strange vessel at anchor in the bay. After a while, a boat put off for land, and a stranger stepped on shore, a lofty, lordly kind of man, tall and dry, with a meagre face, furnished with huge moustache He was clad in Flemish doublet and hose, and an insufferably tall hat, with a cocktail feather. Such was the patroon Killian Van Rensellaer who had come out from Holland to found a colony or patroonship on a great tract of wild land, granted to him by their High Mighti- nesses the Lords States General, in the upper regions of the Hudson.

And now, from time to time, floated down tidings to the Manhattoes of the growing im- portance of this new colony, Every account

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represented Killian Van Rensellaer as rising in importance and becoming a mighty pa- troon in the land. He had received more re- cruits from Holland. His patroonship of Ren- sellaerwick lay immediately below Fort Au- rania, and extended for several miles on each side of the Hudson, beside embracing the mountainous region of the Helderberg. Over all this he claimed to hold separate jurisdic- tion, independent of the colonial authorities of New Amsterdam.

At length tidings came that the patroon of Rensellaerwick had extended his usurpations along the river, beyond the limits granted him by their High Mightinesses; and that he had even seized upon a rocky island in the Hudson, commonly known by the name of Beam Island, where he was erecting a fortress to be called by the lordly name of "Rensel- laerstein."

Wouter Van Twiller was roused by this intelligence. After consulting with his bur- gomasters, he dispatched a letter to the pa- troon of Rensellaerwick, demanding by what right he had seized upon this island, which lay beyond the bounds of his patroonship. The answer of Killian Van Rensellaer was in his own lordly style, "By wapen recht!" that is to say, by the right of arms, or, in

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common parlance, by club-law. This answer plunged the worthy Wouter in one of the deep- est doubts he had in the whole course of his administration; in the meantime, while Wout- er doubted, the lordly Killian went on to finish his fortress of Rensellaerstein, about which I foresee I shall have something to record in a future chapter of this most eventful history. In the fulness of time the yacht arrived be- fore Beam Island, and Antony the Trumpeter, mounting the poop, sounded a parley to the fortress. In a little while the steeple crowned hat of Nicholas Koorn, the wacht-meester, rose above the battlements, followed by his iron visage, and ultimately his whole person, armed, as before to the very teeth; while one by one, a whole row of Helderbergers reared their round burly heads above the wall, and beside each pumpkin-head peered the end of a rusty musket. Nothing daunted by this for- midable array Antony Van Corlear drew forth and read his missive from William the Testy ordering the garrison to quit the premises bag and baggage on pain of vengeance of the potentate of the Manhattoes. In reply the wacht-meester applied the thumb of his right hand to the end of his nose and the thumb of his left hand to the little finger of his right, and spreading each hand like a fan, made an

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aerial flourish with his fingers. Antony Van Corlear was sorely perplexed to understand this sign which seemed to him something mys- terious and masonic. Not liking to betray his ignorance he again read with a loud voice the missive of William the Testy, and again Nicholas Koorn applied the thumb of his right hand to the end of his nose, and repeated this kind of nasal weathercock. Anthony Van Corlear now persuaded himself that this was some shorthand sign or symbol, current in diplomacy, which, though unintelligible to a new diplomat, like himself, would spell volumes to the experienced intellect of Wil- liam the Testy; considering his embassy there- fore at an end he sounded his trumpet with great complacency, and set sail on his return down the river, every now and then practic- ing the mysterious sign of the wacht-meester to keep it accurately in mind.

Arrived at New Amsterdam he made a faithful report of his embassy to the Governor, accompanied by a manual exhibition of the response of Nicholas Koorn. The Governor was equally perplexed with his embassy. He was deeply versed in the mysteries of Free Masonry, but they threw no light on the mat- ter. He knew every variety of windmill and weathercock but was not a whit the wiser as

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to the aerial sign in question. He called a meeting of his Council. Antony Van Corlear stood forth in the midst and putting the thumb of his right hand to his nose and the thumb of his left hand to the finger of the right, he gave a faithful facsimile of the por- tentous sign. Having a nose of unusual dimensions, it was as if the reply was placed in capitals, but all in vain, the worthy burgo- masters were equally perplexed with the Governor. Each one put his thumb to the end of his nose, spread his fingers like a fan, imitated the motion of Antony Van Corlear and smoked in dubious silence. Several times was Antony obliged to stand forth like a fugle- man, and repeat the sign, and each time a cir- cle of nasal weathercocks might be seen in the Council Chamber.

The Council broke up in sore perplexity. The matter got abroad and Antony Van Corlear was stopped at every corner to repeat the sig- nal to a knot of anxious newsmongers, each of whom departed with his thumb to his nose and his fingers in the air, to carry the story home to his family.

And it is still said that to the present day the thumb to the nose and the fingers in the air is apt to be the reply of the Heldcrbergers whenever called upon for any long arrears of rent.

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Oloffe Van Kortlandt's Dream at the Battery of Manhattan

His wonderful prophecy of the founding of

New York City and its marvelous

fulfilment

Washington Irving now recalls and recites to us at our request the "Dream of Oloffe Van Kortlandt" and its early fulfilment which he also at times refers to, when speaking of New York, as "A lively and wonderful chick- en hatched from the egg of old Communipaw" so he now relates to us how (some two hundred years ago) the sage Oloffe voyaged from Com- munipaw Bay to the Battery where he had a most remarkable dream now completely ful- filled that the good St. Nicholas came riding over the tops of the trees, and descended upon the island of Manhattan and sat himself down and smoked, "and the smoke ascended in the sky, and formed a cloud overhead; and Oloffe

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bethought him, and he hastened and climbed up to the top of one of the tallest trees, and saw that the smoke spread over a great ex- tent of country; and, as he considered it more attentively, he fancied that the great volume assumed a variety of marvelous forms, where, in dim obscurity, he saw shadowed out palaces and domes and lofty spires, all of which lasted but a moment, and then passed away." So New York, like Alba Longa and Rome, and other cities of antiquity, was under the im- mediate care of its tutelar saint. Its destiny was foreshadowed, for now the palaces and domes and lofty spires are real and genuine, and something more than dreams are made of.

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The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

In the bosom of one of those spacious coves which indent the eastern shore of the Hudson, at that broad expansion of the river denomi- nated by the ancient Dutch navigators the Tappan Zee, and where they always prudently shortened sail, and implored the protection of St. Nicholas when they crossed, there lies a small market-town or rural port, which by some is called Greensburgh, but which is more generally and properly known by the name of Tarry Town. This name was given, we are told, in former days, by the good house- wives of the adjacent country, from the in- veterate propensity of their husbands to linger about the village tavern on market days. Be that as it may, I do not vouch for the fact, but merely advert to it, for the sake of being precise and authentic. Not far from this village, perhaps about two miles, there is a little valley, or rather lap of land, among high hills, which is one of the quietest places in the whole world. A small brook glides through it, with just murmur enough to lull one to

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repose; and the occasional whistle of a quail, or tapping of a woodpecker, is almost the only sound that ever breaks in upon the uniform tranquillity.

I recollect that, when a stripling, my first exploit in squirrel-shooting was in a grove of tall walnut-trees that shades one side of the valley. I had wandered into it at noon time, when all nature is peculiarly quiet, and was startled by the roar of my own gun, as it broke the Sabbath stillness around, and was pro- longed and reverberated by the angry echoes. If ever I should wish for a retreat, whither I might steal from the world and its distrac- tions, and dream quietly away the remnant of a troubled life, I know of none more promising than this little valley.

From the listless repose of the place, and the peculiar character of its inhabitants, who are descendants from the original Dutch settlers, this sequestered glen has long been known by the name of Sleepy Hollow, and its rustic lads are called the Sleepy Hollow Boys throughout all the neighboring country. A drowsy, dreamy influence seems to hang over the land and to pervade the very atmosphere. Some say that the place was bewitched by a high German doctor, during the early days of the settlement; others, that an old Indian chief,

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the prophet or wizard of his tribe, held his pow-wows there before the country was dis- covered by Master Hendrick Hudson. Cer- tain it is, the place still continues under the sway of some witching power, that holds a spell over the minds of the good people, caus- ing them to walk in a continual reverie. They are given to all kinds of marvellous beliefs; are subject to trances and visions; and fre- quently see strange sights, and hear music and voices in the air. The whole neighborhood abounds with local tales, haunted spots, and twilight superstitions; stars shoot and meteors glare oftener across the valley than in any other part of the country, and the nightmare, with her whole nine fold, seems to make it the favorite scene of her gambols.

The dominant spirit, however, that haunts this enchanted region, and seems to be com- mander-in-chief of all the powers of the air, is the apparition of a figure on horseback without a head. It is said by some to be the ghost of a Hessian trooper, whose head had been carried away by a cannon-ball, in some nameless battle during the Revolutionary war; and who is ever and anon seen by the country folk, hurrying along the gloom of night, as if on wings of the wind. His haunts are not confined to the valley, but extend at times to

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the adjacent roads, and especially to the vicin- ity of a church at no great distance. Indeed, certain of the most authentic historians of those parts, who have been careful in collect- ing and collating the floating facts concerning this spectre, allege that the body of the troop- er, having been buried in the church-yard, the ghost rides forth to the scene of battle in nightly quest of his head; and that the rushing speed with which he sometimes passes along the Hollow, like a midnight blast, is owing to his being belated, and in a hurry to get back to the churchyard before daybreak.

Such is the general purport of this legendary superstition, which has furnished material for many a wild story in that region of shadows; and the specter is known, at all the country firesides, by the name of the Headless Horse- man of Sleepy Hollow.

It is remarkable that the visionary propen- sity I have mentioned is not confined to the native inhabitants of the valley, but is un- consciously imbibed by every one who re- sides there for a time. However wide-awake they may have been before they entered that sleepy region, they are sure, in a little time, to inhale the witching influence of the air, and begin to grow imaginative to dream dreams, and see apparitions.

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I mention this peaceful spot with all possible laud; for it is in such little retired Dutch val- leys, found here and there embosomed in the great State of New York, that population, manners and customs, remain fixed; while the great torrent of migration and improvement which is making such incessant changes in other parts of this restless country, sweeps by them unobserved. They are like those little nooks of still water which border a rapid stream; where we may see the straw and bubble riding quietly at anchor, or slowly revolving in their mimic harbor, undisturbed by the rush of the passing current. Though many years have elapsed since I trod the drowsy shades of Sleepy Hollow, yet I question wheth- er I should not still find the same trees and the same families vegetating in its sheltered bosom.

In this by-place of nature, there abode, in a remote period of American history, that is to say, some thirty years since, a worthy wight of the name of Ichabod Crane; who sojourned, or, as he expressed it, "tarried," in Sleepy Hollow, for the purpose of instruct- ing the children of the vicinity.

That all this might not be too onerous on the purses of his rustic patrons, who are apt to consider the cost of schooling a grievous burden, and schoolmasters as mere drones, he

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had various ways of rendering himself both useful and agreeable. He assisted the farm- ers occasionally in the lighter labors of their farms; helped to make hay, mended the fences; took the horses to water; drove the cows from pasture; and cut wood for the winter fire. He laid aside, too, all the dominant dignity and absolute sway with which he lorded it in his little empire, the school, and became wonder- fully gentle and ingratiating. He found favor in the eyes of the mothers, by petting the children, particularly the youngest; and like the lion bold, which whilom so magnani- mously the lamb did hold, he would sit with a child on one knee, and rock a cradle with his foot for whole hours together.

In addition to his other vocations, he was the singing-master of the neighborhood, and picked up many bright shillings by instruct- ing the young folks in psalmody. It was a matter of no little vanity to him, on Sunday to take his station in front of the church gal- lery, with a band of chosen singers where, in his own mind, he completely carried away the psalm from the parson. Certain it is, his voice resounded far above all the rest of the congregation; and there are peculiar quavers still to be heard in that church, and which may even be heard half a mile off, quite to the

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opposite side of the mill-pond, on a still Sunday morning, which are said to be legitimately descended from the nose of Ichabod Crane. Thus, by divers little makeshifts in that in- genious way which is commonly denominated "by hook and by crook" the worthy pedagogue got on tolerably enough, and was thought by all who understood nothing of the labor of head work to have a wonderfully easy life of it. The school master is generally a man of some importance in the female circle of a ru- ral neighborhood; being considered a kind of idle gentlemanlike personage, of vastly supe- rior taste and accomplishments to the rough country swains, and, indeed, inferior in learn- ing only to the parson. His appearance, there- fore, is apt to occasion some little stir at the tea-table of a farmhouse, and the addition of a supernumerary dish of cakes or sweetmeats, or, peradventure, the parade of a silver tea- pot. Our man of letters, therefore, was pe- culiarly happy in the smiles of all country dam- sels. How he would figure among them in the churchyard, between services on Sundays! gathering grapes for them from the wild vines that overrun the surrounding trees; reciting for their amusement all the epitaphs on the tombstones; or sauntering, with a whole bevy of them, along the banks of the adjacent

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mill-pond; while the more bashful country pumpkins hung sheepishly back, envying his superior elegance and address.

Prom his half itinerant life, also, he was a kind of traveling gazette, carrying the whole budget of local gossip from house to house; so that his appearance was always greeted with satisfaction. He was, moreover, es- teemed by the women as a man of great eru- dition, for he had read several books quite through, and was a perfect master of Cotton Mather's history of New England Witchcraft, in which, by the way, he most firmly and po- tently believed.

He was, in fact, an odd mixture of small shrewdness and simple credulity. His appe- tite for the marvelous, and his powers of digest- ing it, were equally extraordinary; and both had been increased by his residence in this spellbound region. No tale was too gross or monstrous for his capacious swallow. It was often his delight, after his school was dismissed in the afternoon, to stretch himself on the rich bed of clover, bordering the little brook that whimpered by his school-house, and there con over old Mather's direful tales, until the gathering dusk of the evening made the print- ed page a mere mist before his eyes. Then, as he wended his way, by swamp and stream

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and awful woodland, to the farmhouse where he happened to be quartered, every sound of nature, at that witching hour, fluttered his excited imagination: the moan of the whip- poorwill from the hillside; the boding cry of the tree-toad, that harbinger of storm; the dreary hooting of the screech owl, or the sud- den rustling in the thicket of birds frightened from their roost.

Another of his sources of fearful pleasure was, to pass long winter evenings with the old Dutch wives, as they sat spinning by the fire, with a row of apples roasting and sputtering along the hearth, and listen to their marvelous tales of ghosts and goblins, and haunted fields, and haunted brooks, and haunted bridges, and haunted houses, and particularly of the headless horseman, or galloping Hessian of the Hollow, as they sometimes called him. He would delight them equally by his anecdotes of witchcraft, and of the direful moans and portentous sights and sound in the air, which prevailed in the earlier times of Connecticut; and would frighten them wofully with specu- lations upon comets and shooting stars; and with the alarming fact that the world did ab- solutely turn round, and that they were half the time topsy-turvy!

What fearful shapes and shadows beset his

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path amidst the dim and ghastly glare of a snowy night! With what wistful look did he eye every trembling ray of light streaming across the waste fields from some distant win- dow!— How often was he appalled by some shrub covered with snow, which, like a sheeted spectre, beset his very path! How often did he shrink with curdling awe at the sound of his own steps on the frosty crust beneath his feet; and dread to look over his shoulder, lest he should behold some uncouth being tramp- ing close behind him! and how often was he thrown into complete dismay by some rushing blast, howling among the trees, in the idea that it was the Galloping Hessian on one of his nightly scourings!

All these, however, were mere terrors of the night, phantoms of the mind that walk in darkness; and though he had seen many spec- tres in his time, and been more than once beset by Satan in divers shapes, in his lonely peram- bulations, yet daylight put an end to all these evils; and he would have passed a pleasant life of it, in despite of the devil and all his works, if his path had not been crossed by a being that causes more perplexity to mortal man than ghosts, goblins, and the whole race of witches put together, and that was a woman.

Among the musical disciples who assembled,

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one evening in each week, to receive his instruc- tions in psalmody, was Katrina Van Tassel the daughter and only child of a substantial Dutch farmer. She was a blooming lass of fresh eighteen; plump as a partridge; ripe and melting and rosy cheeked as one of her father's peaches, and universally famed, not merely for her beauty, but her vast expecta- tions. She was withal a little of a coquette, as might be perceived even in her dress, which was a mixture of ancient and modern fashions, as most suited to set off her charms. She wore the ornaments of pure yellow gold, which her great-great-grandmother had brought over from Saardam; the tempting stomacher of the olden time; and withal a provoking short petticoat, to display the prettiest foot and ankle in the country round.

Ichabod Crane had a soft and foolish heart towards the sex; and it is not to be wondered at, that so tempting a morsel soon found favor in his eyes; more especially after he had visit- ed her in her paternal mansion. Old Baltus Van Tassel was a perfect picture of a thriving, contented, liberal-hearted farmer. He seldom, it is true, sent either his eyes or his thoughts beyond the boundaries of his own farm; but within those everything was snug, happy, and well-conditioned. He was satisfied with his

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wealth, but not proud of it; and piqued him- self upon the hearty abundance, rather than the style in which he lived. His stronghold was situated on the banks of the Hudson, in one of those green, sheltered, fertile nooks, in which the Dutch farmers are so fond of nest- ling. A great elm tree spread its broad branch- es over it; at the foot of which bubbled up a spring of the softest and sweetest water, in a little well, formed of a barrel; and then stole sparkling away through the grass, to a neigh- boring brook, that bubbled along among alders and dwarf willows. Hard by the farmhouse was a vast barn, that might have served for a church; every window and crevice of which seemed bursting forth with the treasures of the farm; the flail was busily resounding with- in it from morning to night; swallows and martins skimmed twittering about the eaves; and rows of pigeons, some with one eye turned up, as if watching the weather, some with their heads under their wings, or buried in their bosoms, and others swelling,, and cooing, and bowing about their dames, were enjoying the sunshine on the roof. Sleek unwieldy pork- ers were grunting in the repose and abundance of their pens; whence sallied forth, now and then, troops of sucking pigs, as if to snuff the air. A stately squadron of snowy geese were

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riding in an adjoining pond, convoying whole fleets of ducks; regiments of turkeys were gobbling through the farmyard, and guinea fowls fretting about it, like ill-tempered house- wives, with their peevish discontented cry. Before the barn door strutted the gallant cock, that pattern of a husband, a warrior, and a fine gentleman, clapping his burnished wings, and crowing in the pride and gladness of his heart sometimes tearing up the earth with his feet, and then, generously calling his ever- hungry family of wives and children to enjoy the rich morsel which he had discovered.

When he entered the house the conquest of his heart was complete. It was one of those spacious farmhouses, with high-ridged, but lowly-sloping roofs, built in the style handed down from the first Dutch settlers; the low projecting eaves forming a piazza along the front, capable of being closed up in bad weath- er. Under this were hung flails, harness, va- rious utensils of husbandry, and nets for fish- ing in the neighboring river. Benches were built along the sides for summer use; and a great spinning-wheel at one end, and a churn at the other, showed the various uses to which this important porch might be devoted. From this piazza the wondering Ichabod entered the hall, which formed the center of the

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mansion and the place of usual residence. Here, rows of resplendent pewter, ranged on a long dresser, dazzled his eyes. In one corner stood a huge bag of wool ready to be spun; in an- other a quantity of linsey-woolsey just from the loom; ears of Indian corn, and strings of dried apples and peaches, hung in gay festoon along the walls, mingled with the gaud of red peppers; and a door left ajar gave him a peep into the best parlor, where the claw-footed chairs, and dark mahogany tables, shone like mirrors; and irons, with their accompanying shovel and tongs, glistened from their covert of asparagus tops; mock-oranges and conch- shells decorated the mantel-piece; strings of various colored birds' eggs were suspended above it: a great ostrich egg was hung from the centre of the room, and a corner cupboard, knowingly left open, displayed immense treas- ures of old silver and well-mended china.

From the moment Ichabod laid his eyes upon these regions of delight, the peace of his mind was at an end, and his only study was how to gain the affections of the peerless daughter of Van Tassel. In this enterprise, however, he had more real difficulties than generally fell to the lot of a knight-errant of yore, who seldom had anything but giants, enchanters, fiery dragons, and such like

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easily-conquered adversaries, to contend with; and had to make his way merely through gates of iron and brass, and walls of adamant to the castle keep, where the lady of his heart was confined; all which he achieved as easily as a man would carve his way to the centre of a Christmas pie; and then the lady gave him her hand as a matter of course. Ichabod, on the contrary, had to win his way to the heart of a country coquette, beset with a labyrinth of whims and caprices, which were forever presenting new difficulties and impediments; and he had to encounter a host of fearful ad- versaries of real flesh and blood, the numerous rustic admirers, who beset every portal to her heart keeping a watchful and angry eye upon each other, but ready to fly out in the common cause against any new competitor. Among these the most formidable was a burly, roaring, roystering blade, of the name of Abraham, or, according to the Dutch ab- breviation, Brom Van Brunt, the hero of the country round, which rang with his feats of strength and hardihood. He was broad- shouldered and double-jointed, with short curling black hair, and a bluff, but not un- pleasant countenance, having a mingled air of fun and arrogance. From his Herculean frame and great powers of limb, he had

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received the nickname of Brom Bones, by which he was universally known. He was famed for great knowledge and skill in horsemanship being as dexterous on horseback as a Tartar. He was foremost at all races and cock-fights; and, with the ascendency which bodily strength acquires in rustic life, was the um- pire in all disputes, setting his hat on one side, and giving his decisions with an air and tone admitting of no gainsay or appeal. He was always ready for either a fight or a frolic; but had more mischief than ill-will in his com- position; and, with all his overbearing rough- ness, there was a strong dash of waggish good humor at bottom. He had three or four boon companions, who regarded him as their model, and at the head of whom he scoured the coun- try, attending every scene of feud or merri- ment for miles round. In cold weather he was distinguished by a fur cap, surmounted with a flaunting fox's tail; and when the folks at a country gathering descried this well- known crest at a distance, whisking about among a squad of hard riders, they always stood by for a squall. Sometimes his crew would be heard dashing along past the farm- houses at midnight, with whoop and halloo, like a troop of Don Cossacks; and the old dames, startled out of their sleep, would listen

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for a moment till the hurry-scurry had clat- tered by, and then exclaim, "Ay, there goes Brom Bones and his gang!" The nieghbors looked upon him with a mixture of awe, ad- miration, and good will; and when any mad- cap prank, or rustic brawl, occurred in the vicinity, always shook their heads and war- ranted Brom Bones was at the bottom of it.

This rantipole hero had for some time singled out the blooming Katrina for the object of his uncouth gallantries, and though his amor- ous toyings were something like the gentle caresses and endearments of a bear, yet it was whispered that she did not altogether dis- courage his hopes. Certain it is, his advances were signals for rival candidates to retire, who felt no inclination to cross a lion in his amours ; insomuch, that when his horse was seen tied to Van Tassel's paling, on a Sunday night, a sure sign that his master was courting, or, as it is termed, "sparking," within, all other suitors passed by in despair, and carried the war into other quarters.

Such was the formidable rival with whom Ichabod Crane had to contend, and, consider- ing all things, a stouter man than he would have shrunk from the competition, and a wis- er man would have despaired.

To have taken the field openly against his

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rival would have been madness; for he was not a man to be thwarted in his armours any more than that stormy lover, Achilles. Ich- abod, therefore, made his advances in a quiet and gently-insinuating manner. Under cov- er of his character of singing-master, he made frequent visits at the farmhouse; not that he had anything to apprehend from the meddle- some interference of parents, which is so often a stumbling-block in the path of lovers. Bait Van Tassell was an easy indulgent soul; he loved his daughter better even than his pipe, and, like a reasonable man and an excellent father, let her have her way in everything. His notable little wife, too, had enough to do to attend to her housekeeping and manage her poultry; for, as she sagely observed, ducks and geese are foolish things, and must be looked after, but girls can take care of themselves. Thus, while the busy dame bust- led about the house, or plied her spinning- wheel at one end of the piazza, honest Bait would sit smoking his evening pipe at the other, watching the achievements of a little wooden warrior, who, armed with a sword in each hand, was most valiantly fighting the wind on the pinnacle of the barn. In the meantime, Ichabod would carry on his suit with the daughter by the side of the spring

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under the great elm, or sauntering along in the twilight, that hour so favorable to the lov- er's eloquence.

He who wins a thousand common hearts is therefore entitled to some renown; but he who keeps undisputed sway over the heart of a coquette, is indeed a hero. Certain it is, this was not the case with the redoubtable Brom Bones; and from the moment Ichabod Crane made his advances, the interests of the former evidently declined; his horse was no longer seen tied at the palings on Sunday nights, and a deadly feud gradually arose be- tween him and the preceptor of Sleepy Hollow.

He was gaunt and shagged, with a ewe neck and a head like a hammer; his rusty mane and tail were tangled and knotted with burrs; one eye had lost its pupil, and was glaring and spectral; but the other had the gleam of gen- uine devil in it. Still he must have had fire and mettle in his day, if we may judge from the name he bore of Gunpowder. He had, in fact, been a favorite steed of his master's the choleric Van Ripper, who was a furious rider, and had infused, very probably, some of his own spirit into the animal; for, old and brokendown as he looked, there was more of the lurking devil in him than in any young filly in the country.

Ichabod was a suitable figure for such a steed. He rode with short stirrups, which brought his knees nearly up to the pommel of the saddle; his sharp elbows stuck out like grasshoppers'; he carried his whip perpen- dicularly in his hand, like a sceptre, and, as his horse jogged on, the motion of his arm was not unlike the flapping of a pair of wings. A small wool hat rested on the top of his nose, for so his scanty strip of forehead might be called; and the skirts of his black coat flutter- ed out almost to the horse's tail. Such was the appearance of Ichabod and his steed, as he shambled out of the gate of Hans Van Ripper, and it was altogether such an appari- tion as is seldom to be met with in broad day- light.

It was, as I have said, a fine autumnal day, the sky was clear and serene, and nature wore that rich and golden livery which we always associate with the idea of abundance. The forests had put on their sober brown and yel- low, while some trees of the tenderer kind had been nipped by the frost into brilliant dyes of orange, purple and scarlet. Streaming files of wild ducks began to make their ap- pearance high in the air; the bark of the squir- rel might be heard from the groves of beech and hickory nuts, and the pensive whistle of the quail

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at intervals from the neighboring stubble-field. The small birds were taking their farewell banquets. In the fulness of their revelry, they fluttered, chirping and frolicking, from bush to bush, and tree to tree, capricious from the very profusion and variety around them.

As Ichabod jogged slowly on his way, his eye, ever open to every symptom of culinary abundance, ranged with delight over the treas- ures of jolly autumn. On all sides he beheld vast store of apples; some hanging in oppres- sive opulence on the trees; some gathered into baskets and barrels for the market; oth- ers heaped up in rich piles for the cider-press. Farther on he beheld great fields of Indian corn, with its golden ears peeping from their leafy coverts, and holding out the promise of cakes and hasty pudding; and the yellow pumpkins lying beneath them, turning up their fair round bellies to the sun, and giving ample prospects of the most luxurious of pies; and anon he passed the fragrant buckwheat fields, breathing the odor of the beehive, and as he beheld them, soft anticipations stole over his mind of dainty slapjacks, well buttered, and garnished with honey or treacle, by the delicate dimpled hand of Katrina Van Tassel.

Thus, feeding his mind with many sweet thoughts and "sugared suppositions," he jour-

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neyed along the sides of a range of hills which look out upon some of the goodliest scenes of the mighty Hudson. The sun gradually wheeled his broad disk down into the west. The wide bosom of the Tappan Zee lay mo- tionless and glassy, excepting that here and there a gentle undulation waved and pro- longed the blue shadow of the distant moun- tain. A few amber clouds floated in the sky, without a breath of air to move them. The horizon was of a fine golden tint, changing gradually into a pure apple green, and from that into the deep blue of the mid-heaven. A slanting ray lingered on the woody crests of the precipices that overhung some parts of the river, giving greater depth to the dark- gray and purple of their rocky sides. A sloop was loitering in the distance, dropping slowly down with the tide, her sail hanging uselessly against the mast; and as the reflection of the sky gleamed along the still water, it seemed as if the vessel was suspended in the air.

It was toward evening that Ichabod ar- rived at the castle of the Heer Van Tassel, which he found thronged with the pride and flower of the adjacent country. Old farmers, a spare leathern-faced race, in homespun coats and breeches, blue stockings, huge shoes, and magnificent pewter buckles. Their brisk

withered little dames, in close crimped caps, long-waisted short-gowns, homespun petti- coats, with scissors and pincushion, and gay calico pockets hanging on the outside. Bux- om lassies, almost as antiquated as their moth- ers, excepting where a straw hat, a fine ribbon, or perhaps a white frock, gave symptoms of city innovation. The sons, in short square- skirted coats with rows of stupendous brass buttons, and their hair generally queued in the fashion of the times, especially if they could procure an eel-skin for the purpose, it being esteemed, through the country, as a po- tent nourisher and strengthener of the hair.

Brom Bones, however, was the hero of the scene, having come to the gathering on his favorite steed Daredevil, a creature, like him- self, full of mettle and mischief, and which no one but himself could manage. He was, in fact, noted for preferring vicious animals, given to all kinds of tricks, which kept the rider in constant risk of his neck, for he held a tractable well-broken horse as unworthy of a lad of spirit.

Fain would I pause to dwell upon the world of charms that burst upon the enraptured gaze of my hero, as he entered the state parlor of Van Tassel's mansion. Not those of the bevy of buxom lassies, with their luxurious display

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of red and white; but the ample charms of a genuine Dutch country tea-table, in the sump- tuous time orf autumn. Such heaped-up plat- ters of cakes of various and almost inde- scribable kinds, known only to experienced Dutch housewives! There was the doughty doughnut, the tenderer oly koek, and the crisp and crumbling cruller; sweet cakes and short cakes, ginger cakes and honey cakes, and the whole family of cakes. And then there were apple pies and peach pies and pump- kin pies; besides slices of ham and smoked beef; and moreover delectable dishes of pre- served plums, and peaches, and pears, and quinces; not to mention broiled shad and roasted chickens, together with bowls of milk and cream, all mingled higgledy-piggledy, pretty much as I have enumerated them, with the motherly tea-pot sending up its clouds of vapor from the midst Heaven bless the mark! I want breath and time to dis- cuss this banquet as it deserves, and am too eager to get on with my story. Happily, Ichabod Crane was not in so great a hurry as his historian, but did ample justice to every dainty.

He was a kind and thankful creature, whose heart dilated in proportion as his skin was filled with good cheer; and whose spirits rose

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with eating as some men's do with drink. He could not help, too, rolling his large eyes round him as he ate, and chuckling with the possi- bility that he might one day be lord of all this scene of almost unimaginable luxury and splendor. Then, he thought, how soon he'd turn his back upon the old school-house; snap his fingers in the face of Hans Van Rip- per, and every other niggardly patron, and kick any itinerant pedagogue out of doors that should dare to call him comrade!

Old Baltus Van Tassel moved about among his guests with a face dilated with content and good humor, round and jolly as the harvest moon. His hospitable attentions were brief, but expressive, being confined to a shake of the hand, a slap on the shoulder, a loud laugh and a pressing invitation to "fall to, and help themselves."

And now the sound of the music from the common room, or hall, summoned to the dance. The musician was an old grayheaded negro, who had been the itinerant orchestra of the neighborhood for more than half a cen- tury. His instrument was as old and bat- tered as himself. The greater part of the time he scraped on two or three strings, accompany- ing every movement of the bow with a mo- tion of the head; bowing almost to the ground,

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and stamping with his foot whenever a fresh couple were to start.

Ichabod prided himself upon his dancing as much as upon his vocal powers. Not a limp, not a fibre about him was idle; and to have seen his loosely hung frame in full mo- tion, and clattering about the room, you would have thought Saint Vitus himself, that bless- ed patron of the dance, was figuring before you in person. He was the admiration of all the negroes; who, having gathered, of all ages and sizes, from the farm and the neigh- borhood, stood forming a pyramid of shin- ing black faces at every door and window, gazing with delight at the scene, rolling their white eyeballs, and showing grinning rows of ivory from ear to ear. How could the flogger of urchins be otherwise than animated and joyous? The lady of his heart was his partner in the dance, and smiling graciously in reply to all his amorous oglings; while Brom Bones, sorely smitten with love and jealousy, sat brooding by himself in one corner.

When the dance was at an end, Ichabod was attracted to a knot of the sager folks, who, with old Van Tassel, sat smoking at one end of the piazza, gossiping over former times, and drawing out long stories about the war.

This neighborhood, at the time of which I

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am speaking, was one of those highly-favored places which abound with chronicle and great men. The British and American line had run near it during the war; it had, therefore, been the scene of marauding, and infested with refugees, cowboys, and all kinds of bor- der chivalry. Just sufficient time had elapsed to enable each story-teller to dress up his tale with a little becoming fiction, and in the in- distinctness of his recollections, to make him- self the hero of every exploit.

There was the story of Doffue Martling, a large blue-bearded Dutchman, who had near- ly taken a British frigate with an old iron nine-pounder from a mud breastwork, only that his gun burst at the sixth discharge. And there was an old gentleman who shall be name- less, being too rich a mynheer to be lightly mentioned, who, in the battle of Whiteplains, being an excellent master of defence, parried a musket ball with a small sword, insomuch that he absolutely felt it whiz round the blade, and glance off at the hilt: in proof of which, he was ready at any time to show the sword, with the hilt a little bent. There were sever- al more that had been equally great in the field, not one of whom but was persuaded that he had a considerable hand in bringing the war to a happy termination.

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But all these were nothing to the tales of ghosts and apparitions that succeeded. The neighborhood is rich in legendary treasures of the kind. Local tales and superstitions thrive best in these sheltered long-settled re- treats; but are trampled under foot by the shifting throng that forms the population of most of our country places. Besides, there is no encouragement for ghosts in most of our villages, for they have scarcely had time to finish their first nap, and turn themselves in their graves, before their surviving friends have travelled away from the nieghborhood; so that when they turn out at night to walk their rounds, they have no acquaintance left to call upon. This is perhaps the reason why we so seldom hear of ghosts except in our long- established Dutch communities.

The immediate cause, however, of the prev- alence of supernatural stories in these parts was doubtless owing to the vicinity of Sleepy Hollow. There was a contagion in the very air that blew from that haunted region; breathed forth an atmosphere of dreams and fancies infecting all the land. Several of the Sleepy Hollow people were present at Van Tassel's, and, as usual, were doling out their wild and wonderful legends. Many dismal tales were told about funeral trains, and mourning

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cries and wailings heard and seen about the great tree where the unfortunate Major Andre was taken, and which stood in the neighborhood. Some mention was made also of the woman in white, that haunted the dark glen at Raven Rock, and was often heard to shriek on winter nights before a storm, hav- ing perished there in the snow. The chief part of the stories, however, turned upon the favorite specter of Sleepy Hollow, the head- less horseman, who had been heard several times of late, patroling the country; and, it was said, tethered his horse nightly among the graves in the church-yard.

The sequestered situation of this church seems always to have made it a favorite haunt of troubled spirits. It stands on a knoll, surrounded by locust-trees and lofty elms, from among which its decent whitewashed walls shine modestly forth, like Christian purity beaming through the shades of retire- ment. A gentle slope descends from it to a silver sheet of water, bordered by high trees, between which, peeps may be caught at the blue hills of the Hudson. To look upon its grass-grown yard, where the sunbeams seem to sleep so quietly, one would think that there at least the dead might rest in peace. On one side of the church extends a wide woody dell,

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along which raves a large brook among brok- en rocks and trunks of fallen trees. Over a deep black part of the stream, not far from the church, was formerly thrown a wooden bridge; the road that led to it, and the bridge itself, were thickly shaded by overhanging trees, which cast a gloom about it, even in the daytime; but occasioned a fearful darkness at night. This was one of the favorite haunts of the headless horseman; and the place where he was most frequently encountered. The tale was told of old Brouwer, a most heret- ical disbeliever in ghosts, how he met the horse- man returning from his foray into Sleepy Hollow, and was obliged to get up behind him ; how they galloped over bush and brake, over hill and swamp, until they reached the bridge; when the horseman suddenly turned into a skeleton, threw old Brouwer into the brook, and sprang away over the tree-tops with a clap of thunder.

This story was immediately matched by thrice marvelous adventure of Brom Bones, who made light of the galloping Hessian as an arrant jockey. He affirmed that, on return- ing one night from the neighboring village of Sing Sing, he had been overtaken by this midnight trooper; that he had offered to race with him for a bowl of punch, and should

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have won it too, for Daredevil beat the gob- lin horse all hollow, but just as they came to the church bridge, the Hessian bolted, and vanished in a flash of fire.

All these tales, told in that drowsy under- tone with which men talk in the dark, the countenances of the listeners only now and then receiving a casual gleam from the glare of a pipe, sank deep in the mind of Ichabod. He repaid them in kind with large extracts from his invaluable author, Cotton Mather, and added many marvelous events that had taken place in his native State of Connecti- cut, and fearful sights which he had seen in his nightly walks about Sleepy Hollow.

The revel now gradually broke up. The old farmers gathered together their families in their wagons, and were heard for some time rattling along the hollow roads, and over the distant hills. Some of the damsels mount- ed on pillions behind their favorite swains, and their light-hearted laughter, mingling with the clatter of hoofs, echoed along the silent woodlands, sounding fainter and fainter until they gradually died away and the late scene of noise and frolic was all silent and de- serted. Ichabod only lingered behind, ac- cording to the custom of country lovers, to have a tete-a-tete with the heiress, fully

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convinced that he was now on the high road to success.

Without looking to the right or left to no- tice the scene of rural wealth, on which he had so often gloated, he went straight to the stable, and with several hearty cuffs and kicks, roused his steed most uncourteously from the com- fortable quarters in which he was soundly sleeping, dreaming of mountains of corn and oats, and whole valleys of timothy and clover.

It was the very witching time of night that Ichabod, heavy-hearted and crest-fallen, pur- sued his travel homewards, along the sides of the lofty hills which rise above Tarry town, and which he had traversed so cheerily in the afternoon. The hour was as dismal as him- self. Far below him, the Tappan Zee spread its dusky and indistinct waste of waters, with here and there the tall mast of a sloop, riding quietly at anchor under the land. In the dead hush of midnight, he could even hear the barking of the watchdog from the opposite shore of the Hudson; but it was so vague and faint as only to give an idea of his distance from this faithful companion of man. Now and then, too, the long-drawn crowing of a cock, accidentally awakened, would sound far, far off, from some farmhouse away among the hills but it was like a dreaming sound in

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his ear. No signs of life occurred near him, but occasionally the melancholy chirp of a cricket, or perhaps the gutteral twang of a bull-frog, from a neighboring marsh, as if sleeping uncomfortably, and turning sudden- ly in his bed.

All the stories of ghosts and goblins that he had heard in the afternoon, now came crowd- ing upon his recollection. The night grew darker and darker; the stars seemed to sink deeper in the sky, and driving clouds occasion- ally hid them from his sight. He had never felt so lonely and dismal. He was, moreover, approaching the very place where many of the scenes of the ghost stories had been laid. In the centre of the road stood an enormous tulip tree, which towered like a giant above all the other trees of the neighborhood, and formed a kind of landmark. Its limbs were gnarled, and fantastic, large enough to form trunks for ordinary trees, twisting down al- most to the earth, and rising again into the air. It was connected with the tragical story of the unfortunate Andre, who had been tak- en prisoner hard by; and was universally known by the name of Major Andre's tree. The common people regarded it with mixture of respect and superstition, partly out of sympathy for the fate of its, ill-starrec] name-

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sake, and partly from the tales of strai ,i sights and doleful lamentations told concern- ing it.

As Ichabod approached this fearful tree, he began to whistle: he thought his whistle was answered it was but a blast sweeping sharply through the dry branches. As he approached a little nearer, he thought he saw something white, hanging in the midst of the tree he paused and ceased whistling; but on looking more narrowly, perceived that it was a place where the tree had been scathed by lightning, and the white wood laid bare. Suddenly he heard a groan his teeth chattered and his knees smote against the saddle: it was but the rubbing of one huge bough upon another, as they were swayed about by the breeze. He passed the tree in safety, but new perils lay before him.

The denouement and catastrophe are fully described on a following page (147) where Brom Bones threw the fatal pumpkin that eventful night.

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his

Rip Van Winkle

Washington Irving now delights us with his story of Rip Van Winkle

The following tale was found among the papers of the late Diedrich Knickerbocker, an old gentleman of New York, who was very curious in the Dutch history of the province, and the manners of the descendants from its primitive settlers. His historical researches, however, did not lie so much among books as among men; for the former are lamentably scanty on his favorite topics; whereas he found the old burgers, and still more their wives, rich in that legendary lore, so invaluable to true history. Whenever, therefore, he happened upon a genuine Dutch family, snugly shut up in its low-roofed farmhouse, under a spreading sycamore, he looked upon it as a little clasped volume of black letter, and studied it with the zeal of a bookworm.

The result of all these researches was a history of the province during the reign of

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the Dutch governors, which he published some years since. There have been various opinions as to the literary character of his work, and, to tell the truth, it is not a whit better than it should be. Its chief merit is its scrupulous accuracy, which indeed was a little questioned on its first appearance, but has since been completely established; and it is now admitted into all historical collec- tions, as a book of unquestionable authority. AVhoever has made a voyage up the Hudson must remember the Kaatskill mountains. They are a dismembered branch of the great Appalachian family, and are seen away to the west of the river, swelling up to a noble height, and lording it over the surrounding country. Every change of season, every change of weath- er, indeed, every hour of the day, produces some change in the magical hues and shapes of these mountains, and they are regarded by all the good wives, far and near, as perfect barometers. When the weather is fair and settled, they are clothed in blue and purple, and print their bold outlines on the clear even- ing sky; but, sometimes, when the rest of the landscape is cloudless, they will gather a hood of gray vapors about their summits, which, in the last rays of the setting sun, will glow and light up like a crown of glory.

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At the foot of these fairy mountains, the voyager may have descried the light smoke curling up from a village, whose shingle-roofs gleam among the trees, just where the blue tints of the upland melt away into the fresh green of the nearer landscape. It is a little village of great antiquity, having been found- ed by some of the Dutch colonists, in the early times of the province, just abo\it the beginning of the government of the good Peter Stuyve- sant (may he rest in peace!), and there were some of the houses of the original settlers standing within a few years, built of small yellow bricks broulght from Holland, having latticed windows and gable fronts, surmounted with weathercocks.

In the same village, and in one of these very houses (which, to tell the precise truth was sadly time worn and weatherbeaten), there lived many years since, while the country was yet a province of Great Britain, a simple, good-natured fellow of the name of Rip Van Winkle. He was a descendant of the Van Winkles who figured so gallantly in the chiv- alrous days of Peter Stuyvesant, and accom- panied him to the siege of Fort Christina. I have observed that he was a simple good- natured man; he was, moreover, a kind neigh- bor, and an obedient hen-pecked husband.

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Indeed, to the latter circumstance might be owing that meekness of spirit which gained him such universal popularity; for those men are most apt to be obsequious and conciliat- ing abroad, who are under the discipline of shrews at home. Their tempers, doubtless, are rendered pliant and malleable in the fiery furnace of domestic tribulation; and a cur- tain lecture is worth all the sermons in the world for teaching the virtues of patience and long-suffering. A termagant wife may, there- fore, in some respects, be considered a toler- able blessing; and if so, Rip Van Winkle was thrice blessed.

Certain it is, that he was a great favorite among all the good wives of the village, who as usual, with the amiable sex, took his part in all family squabbles; and never failed, whenever they talked those matters over in their evening gossipings, to lay all the blame on Dame Van Winkle. The children of the village, too, would shout with joy whenever he approached. He assisted at their sports, made their playthings, taught them to fly kites and shoot marbles, and told them long stories of ghosts, witches, and Indians. When- ever he went dodging about the village, he was surrounded by a troop of them, hanging on his skirts, clambering on his back, and

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playing a thousand tricks on him with im punity; and not a dog would bark at him throughout the neighborhood.

The great error in Rip's composition was an insuperable aversion to all kinds of profit- able labor. It could not be from the want of assiduity or perseverance; for he would sit on a wet rock, with rod as long and heavy as a Tartar's lance, and fish all day without a murmur, even though he should not be en- couraged by a single nibble. He would carry a fowling-piece on his shoulder for hours to gether, trudging through woods and swamps and up hill and down dale, to shoot a few squirrels or wild pigeons. He would never refuse to assist a neighbor even in the rough est toil, and was a foremost man at all country frolics for husking Indian corn, or building stone fences; the women of the village, too, used to employ him to run their errands, and to do such little odd jobs as their less obliging husbands would not do for them. In a word Rip was ready to attend to anybody's busi- ness but his own; but as to doing family duty, and keeping his farm in order, he found it impossible.

In fact, he declared it was of no use to work on his farm; it was the most pestilent little piece of ground in the whole country; every-

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thing about it went wrong, and would go wrong, in spite of him. His fences were con- tinually falling to pieces; his cow would either go astray or get among the cabbages; weeds were sure to grow quicker in his fields than anywhere else; the rain always made a point of setting in just as he had some outdoor work to do; so that though his patrimonial estate had dwindled away under his management, acre by acre, until there was little more left than a mere patch of Indian corn and pota- toes, yet it was the worst conditioned farm in the neighborhood.

Rip Van Winkle, however, was one of those happy mortals, of foolish, well-oiled disposi- tions, who take the world easy, eat white bread or brown, whichever can be got with least thought or trouble, and would rather starve on a penny than work for a pound. If left to himself, he would have whistled life away in perfect contentment; but his wife kept continually dinning in his ears about his idleness, his carelessness, and the ruin he was bringing on his family. Morning, noon and night, her tongue was incessantly going, and everything he said or did was sure to pro- duce a torrent of household eloquence. Rip had but one way of replying to all lectures of the kind, and that, by frequent use, had grown

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into a habit. He shrugged his shoulders, shook his head, cast up his eyes, but said nothing. This, however, always provoked a fresh volley from his wife; so that he was fain to draw off his forces, and take to the outside of the house the only side which, in truth, belongs to a henpecked husband.

Rip's sole domestic adherent was his dog, Wolf, who was as much henpecked as his master; for Dame Van Winkle regarded them as companions in idleness, and even looked upon Wolf with an evil eye, as the cause of his master's going so often astray. True it is, in all points of spirit befitting an honorable dog, he was as courageous an animal as ever scoured the woods but what courage can withstand the ever during and all-besetting terrors of a woman's tongue? The moment Wolf entered the house his crest fell, his tail dropped to the ground, or curled between his legs, he sneaked about with a gallows air, casting many a sidelong glance at Dame Van Winkle, and at the least flourish of a broom- stick or ladle, he would fly to the door with yelping precipitation.

Times grew worse and worse with Rip Van Winkle as years of matrimony rolled on; a tart temper never mellows with age, and a sharp tongue is the only edged tool that grows

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keener with constant use. For a long while he used to console himself, when driven from home, by frequenting a kind of perpetual club of the sages, philosophers, and other idle personages of the village; which held its ses- sions on a bench before a small inn, designated by a rubicund portrait of His Majesty George the Third. Here they used to sit in the shade through a long lazy summer's day, talking listlessly over village gossip, or telling endless sleepy stories about nothing.

From even this stronghold the unlucky Rip was at length routed by his termagant wife, who would suddenly break in upon the tran- quillity of the assemblage and call the members all to naught; nor was that august personage, Nicholas Vedder himself, sacred from the daring tongue of this terrible virago, who charged him outright with encouraging her husband in habits of idleness.

Poor Rip was at last reduced almost to des- pair; and his only alternative, to escape from the labor of the farm and clamor of his wife, was to take gun in hand and stroll away into the woods. Here he would sometimes seat himself at the foot of a tree, and share the con- tents of his wallet with Wolf, with whom he sympathized as a fellow-sufferer in perse- cution. "Poor Wolf," he would say, "thy

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mistress leads thee a dog's life of it; but never mind, my lad, whilst I live thou shalt never want a friend to stand by thee!" Wolf would wag his tail, look wistfully in his master's face, and if dogs can feel pity I verily believe he re- ciprocated the sentiment with all his heart.

In a long ramble of the kind on a fine autum- nal day, Rip had unconsciously scrambled to one of the highest parts of the Kaatskill moun- tains. He was after his favorite sport of squirrel shooting, and the still solitudes had echoed and re-echoed with the reports of his gun. Panting and fatigued, he threw him- self, late in the afternoon, on a green knoll, covered with mountain herbage, that crowned the brow of a precipice. From an opening between the trees he could overlook all the low- er country for many a mile of rich woodland. He saw at a distance the lordly Hudson, far, far below him, moving on its silent but majes- tic course, with the reflection of a purple cloud, or the sail of a lagging bark, here and there sleeping on its glassy bosom, and at last losing itself in the blue Highlands.

On the other side he looked down into a deep mountain glen, wild, lonely, and shagged, the bottom filled with fragments from the impending cliffs, and scarcely lighted by the reflected rays of the setting sun. For some

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time Rip lay musing on this scene; evening was gradually advancing; the mountains be- gan to throw their long blue shadows over the valleys; he saw that it would be dark long be- fore he could reach the village, and he heaved a heavy sign when he thought of encounter- ing the terrors of Dame Van Winkle.

As he was about to descend, he heard a voice from a distance, hallooing, "Rip Van Winkle! Rip Van Winkle!" He looked round, but could see nothing but a crow wing- ing its solitary flight across the mountain. He thought his fancy must have deceived him, and turned again to descend, when he heard the same cry ring through the still evening air: "Rip Van Winkle! Rip Van Winkle!"- at the same time Wolf bristled up his back, and giving a low growl, skulked to his master's side, looking fearfully down into the glen. Rip now felt a vague apprehension stealing over him; he looked anxiously in the same direction, and perceived a strange figure slow- ly toiling up the rocks, and bending under the weight of something he carried on his back. He was surprised to see any human being in this lonely and unfrequented place, but sup- posing it to be some of the neighborhood in need of his assistance, he hastened down to yield it.

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On nearer approach he was still more sur- prised at the singularity of the stranger's appearance. He was a short, square-built old fellow, with thick bushy hair, and a griz- zled beard. His dress was of the antique Dutch fashion a cloth jerkin strapped round the waist several pair of breeches, the outer one of ample volume, decorated with rows of buttons down the sides, and bunches at the knees. He bore on his shoulder a stout keg, that seemed full of liquor, and made signs for Rip to approach and assist him with the load. Though rather shy and distrustful of this new acquaintance, Rip complied with his usual alacrity; and mutually relieving one another, they clambered up a narrow gully, apparently the dry bed of a mountain torrent. As they ascended, Rip every now and then heard long rolling peals, like distant thunder, that seemed to issue out of a deep ravine, or rather cleft, between lofty rocks, toward which their rugged path conducted. He paus- ed for an instant, but supposing it to be the muttering of one of those transient thunder- showers which often take place in mountain heights, he proceeded. Passing through the ravine, they came to a hollow, like a small am- phitheatre, surrounded by perpendicular prec- ipices, over the brinks of which impending

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trees shot their branches, so that you only caught glimpses of the azure sky and the bright evening cloud. During the whole time Rip and his companion had labored on in si- lence; for though the former marvelled great- ly what could be the object of carrying a keg of liquor up this wild mountain, yet there was something strange and incomprehensible about the unknown, that inspired awe and checked familiarity.

On entering the amphitheatre, new objects of wonder presented themselves. On a level spot in the centre was a company of odd-look- ing personages playing at nine-pins. They were dressed in a quaint outlandish fashion; some wore short doublets, others jerkins, with long knives in their belts, and most of them had enormous breeches, of similar style with that of the guide's. Their visages, too, were peculiar: one had a large beard, broad face, and small piggish eyes: the face of another seemed to consist entirely of nose, and was surmounted by a white sugarloaf hat set off with a little red cock's tail. They all had beards, of various shapes and colors. There was one who seemed to be the commander. He was a stout old gentleman, with a weather- beaten countenance; he wore a laced doub- let, broad belt and hanger, high-crowned hat

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and feather, red stockings, and high-heeled shoes, with roses in them. The whole group reminded Rip of the figures in an old Flemish painting, in the parlor of Dominie Van Shaick, the village parson, and which had been brought over from Holland at the time of the settle- ment.

What seemed particularly odd to Rip was, that though these folks were evidently amus- ing themselves, yet they maintained the grav- est faces, the most mysterious silence, and were, withal, the most melancholy party of pleasure he had ever witnessed. Nothing in- terrupted the stillness of the scene but the noise of the balls, which, whenever they were rolled, echoed along the mountains like rum- bling peals of thunder.

As Rip and his companion approached them they suddenly desisted from their play, and stared at him with such fixed statue-like gaze, and such a strange, uncouth, lack-lustre countenances, that his heart turned within him, and his knees smote together. His companion now emptied the contents of the keg into large flagons, and made signs to him to wait upon the company. He obeyed with fear and trembling; they quaffed the liquor in profound silence, and then returned to their game.

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By degrees Rip's awe and apprehension subsided. He even ventured, when no eye was fixed upon him, to taste the beverage, which he found had much of the flavor of ex- cellent Hollands. He was naturally a thirsty soul, and was soon tempted to repeat the draught. One taste provoked another; and he reiterated his visits to the flagon so often that at length his senses were overpowered, his eyes swam in his head, his head gradually declined, and he fell into a deep sleep.

On waking, he found himself on the green knoll when he had first seen the old man of the glen. He rubbed his eyes it was a bright sunny morning. The birds were hopping and twittering among the bushes, and the eagle was wheeling aloft, and breasting the pure mountain breeze. "Surely," thought Rip, "I have not slept here all night." He recalled the occurrences before he fell asleep. The strange man with a keg of liquor the mountain ravine the wild retreat among the rocks the woe-begone party at nine-pins the flagon "Oh! that flagon! that wicked flagon!" thought Rip "what excuse shall I make to Dame Van Winkle!"

He looked round for his gun, but in place of the clean well-oiled fowling-piece, he found an old firelock lying by him, the barrel

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encrusted with rust, the lock falling off, and the stock worm-eaten. He now suspected that the grave roysters of the mountain had put a trick upon him, and, having dosed him with liquor, had robbed him of his gun. Wolf, too, had disappeared, but he might have strayed away after a squirrel or partridge. He whistled after him and shouted his name, but all in vain; the echoes repeated his whistle and shout, but no dog was to be seen.

He determined to revisit the scene of the last evening's gambol, and if he met with any of the party, to demand his dog and gun. As he rose to walk, he found himself stiff in the joints, and wanting in his usual activity. "These mountain beds do not agree with me," thought Rip, "and if this frolic should lay me up with a fit of the rheumatism, I shall have a blessed time with Dame Van Winkle." With some difficulty he got down into the glen : he found the gully up which he and his com- panion had ascended the preceding evening; but to his astonishment a mountain stream was now foaming down it, leaping from rock to rock, and filling the glen with babbling murmurs. He, however, made shift to scram- ble up its sides, working his toilsome way through thickets of birch, sassafras, and witch hazel, and sometimes tripped up or entrangled

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by the wild grapevines that twisted their coils or tendrils from tree to tree, and spread a kind of network in his path.

At length he reached to where the ravine had opened through the cliffs to the amphi- theatre; but no traces of such opening re- mained. The rocks presented a high im- penetrable wall over which the torrent came tumbling in a sheet of feathery foam, and fell into a broad deep basin, black from the shad- ows of the surrounding forest. Here, then, poor Rip was brought to a stand. He again called and whistled after his dog; he was only answered by the cawing of a flock of idle crows, sporting high in air about a dry tree that overhung a sunny precipice; and who, secure in their elevation, seemed to look down and scoff at the poor man's perplexities. What was to be done? the morning was pass- ing away, and Rip felt famished for want of his breakfast. He grieved to give up his dog and gun; he dreaded to meet his wife; but it would not do to starve among the mountains. He shook his head, shouldered the rusty fire- lock, and, with a heart full of trouble and anxiety, turned his steps homeward.

As he approached the village he met a num- ber of people, but none whom he knew, which somewhat surprised him, for he thought him-

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self acquainted with every one in the country round. Their dress, too, was of a different fashion from that to which he was accustomed. They all stared at him with equal marks of surprise, and whenever they cast their eyes upon him, invariably stroked their chins. The constant recurrence of this gesture in- duced Rip, involuntarily, to do the same, when to his astonishment, he found his beard had grown a foot long!

He had now entered the skirts of the village. A troop of strange children ran at his heels, hooting after him, and pointing at his gray beard. The dogs, too, not one of which he recognized for an old acquaintance, barked at him as he passed.

The very village was altered; it was larger and more populous. There were rows of houses which he had never seen before, and those which had been his familiar haunts had disappeared. Strange names were over the doors strange faces at the windows every- thing was strange. His mind now misgave him; he began to doubt whether both he and the world around him were not bewitched. Surely this was his native village, which he had left but the day before. There stood the Kaatskill mountains there ran the silver Hudson at a distance there was every hill

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and dale precisely as it had always been Rip was sorely perplexed "That flagon last night," thought he, "has addled my poor head sadly!"

It was with some difficulty that he found the way to his own house, which he approach- ed with silent awe, expecting every moment to hear the shrill voice of Dame Van Winkle. He found the house gone to decay the roof fallen in, the windows shattered, and the doors off the hinges. A half -starved dog that looked like Wolf was skulking about. Rip called him by name, but the cur snarled, showed his teeth, and passed on. This was an unkind cut indeed "My very dog," sighed poor Rip, "has forgotten me!"

He entered the house, which, to tell the truth, Dame Van Winkle had always kept in neat order. It was empty, forlorn, and ap- parently abandoned. This desolateness over- came all his connubial fears he called loudly for his wife and children the lonely chambers rang for a moment with his voice, and then all again was silence.

He now hurried forth, and hastened to his old resort, the village inn but it too was gone. A large rickety wooden building stood in its place, with great gaping windows, some of them broken and mended with old hats and petticoats, and over the door was painted,

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"the Union Hotel, by Jonathan Doolittle." Instead of the great tree that used to shelter the quiet little Dutch inn of yore, there now was reared a tall naked pole, with something on the top that looked like a red night-cap, and from it was fluttering a flag, on which was a singular assemblage of stars and stripes all this was strange and incomprehensible. He recognized on the sign, however, the ruby face of King George, under which he had smoked so many a peaceful pipe; but even this was singularly metamorphosed. The red coat was changed for one of blue and buff, a sword was held in the hand instead of a scep- tre, the head was decorated with a cocked hat, and underneath was painted in large charac- ters, GENERAL WASHINGTON.

There was, as usual, a crowd of folk about the door, but none that Rip recollected. The very character of the people seemed changed. There was a busy, bustling, disputatious tone about it, instead of the accustomed phlegm and drowsy tranquillity. He looked in vain for the sage Nicholas Vedder, with his broad face, double chin, and fair long pipe, uttering clouds of tobacco smoke instead of idle speech- es; or Van Brummel, the schoolmaster, doling forth the contents of an ancient newspaper. In place of these, a lean, bilious-looking fel-

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low, with his pockets full of handbills, was haranguing vehemently about rights of citi- zens— elections members of congress lib- erty— Bunker's Hill heroes of seventy-six and other words, which were a perfect Baby- lonish jargon to the bewildered Van Winkle. The appearance of Rip, with his long griz- zled beard, his rusty fowling-piece, his uncouth dress, and an army of women and children at his heels, soon attracted the attention of the tavern politicians. They crowded round him eying him from head to foot with great curi- osity. The orator bustled up to him, and drawing him partly aside, inquired "on which side he voted?" Rip stared in vacant stu- pidity. Another short but busy little fellow pulled him by the arm, and, rising on tiptoe, inquired in his ear, "Whether he was Federal or Democrat?" Rip was equally at a loss to comprehend the question; when a knowing, self-important old gentleman, in sharp cocked hat, made his way through the crowd, putting them to the right and left with his elbows as he passed and planting himself before Van Winkle, with one arm a-kimbo, the other rest- ing on his cane, his keen eyes and sharp hat penetrating, as it were, into his very soul, demanded in an austere tone, "what brought him to the election with a gun on his shoulder,

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and a mob at his heels, and whether he meant to breed a riot in the village?" "Alas! gen- tlemen," cried Rip, somewhat dismayed, "I am a poor quiet man, a native of the place, and a loyal subject of the king, God bless him!"

Here a general shout burst from the by- standers— "A tory! a tory! a spy! a refugee! hustle him! away with him!" It was with great difficulty that the self-important man in the cocked hat restored order; and, having as- sumed a tenfold austerity of brow, demanded again of the unknown culprit, what he came there for, and whom he was seeking? The poor man humbly assured him that he meant no harm, but merely came there in search of some of his neighbors, who used to keep about the tavern.

"Well who are they? name them."

Rip bethought himself a moment, and in- quired, "Where's Nicholas Vedder?"

There was a silence for a little while, when an old man replied, in a thin piping voice, "Nicholas Vedder! why, he is dead and gone these eighteen years! There was a wooden tombstone in the churchyard that used to tell all about him, but that's rotten and gone too."

"Where's Brom Dutcher?"

"Oh, he went off to the army in the begin- ning of the war; some say he was killed at the

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storming of Stony Point others say he was drowned in a squall at the foot of Antony's Nose. I don't know he never came back again."

"Where's Van Bummel, the schoolmaster?"

"He went off to the war too, was a great militia general, and is now in congress."

Rip's heart died away at hearing of these sad changes in his home and friends, and find- ing himself thus alone in the world. Every answer puzzled him too, by treating of such enormous lapses of time, and of matters which he could not understand war congress Stony Point; he had no courage to ask after any more friends, but cried out in despair, "Does nobody here know Rip Van Winkle?"

"Oh, Rip Van Winkle!" exclaimed two or three, "Oh, to be sure! that's Rip Van Winkle yonder, leaning against the tree."

Rip looked, and beheld a precise counter- part of himself, as he we at up the mountain apparently as lazy, and certainly as ragged. The poor fellow was now completely con- founded. He doubted his own identity, and whether he was himself or another man. In the midst of his bewilderment, the man in the cocked hat demanded who he was, and what was his name?

"God knows," exclaimed he, at his wits'

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end; "I'm not myself I'm somebody else that's me yonder no that's somebody else got into my shoes I was myself last night, but I fell asleep on the mountain, and they've changed my gun, and everything's changed, and I can't tell what's my name, or who I am!"

The bystanders began now to look at each other, nod, wink significantly, and tap their fingers against their foreheads. There was a whisper, also, about securing the gun, and keeping the old fellow from doing mischief, at the very suggestion of which the self-impor- tant man in the cocked hat retired with some precipitation. At this critical moment a fresh comely woman pressed through the throng to get a peek at the gray-bearded man. She had a chubby child in her arms, which, frightened at his looks, began to cry. "Hush, Rip," cried she, "hush, you little fool; the old man won't hurt you." The name of the child, the air of the mother, the tone of her voice, all awakened a train of recollections in his mind. " What is your name, my good woman?' asked he.

"Judith Gardenier."

"And your father's name?"

"Ah, poor man, Rip Van Winkle was his name, but it's twenty years since he went away from home with his gun, and never has

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been heard of since his dog came home with- out him; but whether he shot himself, or was carried away by the Indians, nobody can tell. I was then but a little girl."

Rip had but one question more to ask; but he put it with a faltering voice:

"Where's your mother?"

"Oh, she too had died but a short time since; she broke a blood-vessel in a fit of passion at a New England peddler."

There was a drop of comfort, at least, in this intelligence. The honest man could contain himself no longer. He caught his daughter and her child in his arms. "I am your father!" cried he "Young Rip Van Winkle once old Rip Van Winkle now! Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?"

All stood amazed, until an old woman, totter- ing out from among the crowd, put her hand to her brow, and peering under it in his face for a moment, exclaimed, "Sure enough! it is Rip Van Winkle it is himself! Welcome home again, old neighbor Why, where have you been these twenty long years?"

Rip's story was soon told, for the whole twenty years had been to him but as one night. The neighbors stared when they heard it; some were seen to wink at each other, and put their tongues in their cheeks: and the

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self-important man in the cocked hat, who, when the alarm was over, had returned to the field, screwed down the corners of his mouth, and shook his head upon which there was a gen- eral shaking of the head throughout the assem- blage.

It was determined, however, to take the opinion of old Peter Vanderdonk, who was seen slowly advancing up the road. He was a descendant of the historian of that name, who wrote one of the earliest accounts of the province. Peter was the most ancient in- habitant of the village, and well versed in all the wonderful events and traditions of the neighborhood. He recollected Rip at once, and corroborated his story in the most satis- factory manner. He assured the company that it was a fact, handed down from his an- cestor the historian, that the Kaatskill moun- tains had always been haunted by strange be- ings. That it was affirmed that the great Hendrick Hudson, the first discoverer of the river and country, kept a kind of vigil there every twenty years, with his crew of the Half- moon; being permitted in this way to revisit the scenes of his enterprise, and keep a guard- ian eye upon the river, and the great city called by his name. That his father had once seen them in their old Dutch dresses

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playing at nine-pins in a hollow of the moun- tains; and that he himself had heard, one sum- mer afternoon, the sound of their balls, like distant peals of thunder.

To make a long story short, the company broke up, and returned to the more important concerns of the election. Rip's daughter took him home to live with her; she had a snug, well-furnished house, and a stout cheery farmer for a husband, whom Rip recollected for one of the urchins that used to climb upon his back. As to Rip's son and heir, who was the ditto of himself, seen leaning against the tree, he was employed to work on the farm; but evinced an hereditary disposition to attend to any thing else but his business.

Rip now resumed his old walks and habits; he soon found many of his former cronies, though all rather the worse for wear and tear of time; and preferred making friends among the rising generation, with whom he soon grew into great favor.

Having nothing to do at home, and being arrived at that happy age when a man can be idle with impunity, he took his place once more on the bench at the inn door, and was reverenced as one of the patriarchs of the vil- lage, and a chronicle of the old times "before the war." It was some time before he could

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get into the regular track of gossip or could be made to comprehend the strange events that had taken place during his torpor. How that there had been a revolutionary war that the coun- try had thrown off the yoke of old England and that, instead of being a subject of his Majesty George the Third, he was now a free citizen of the United States. Rip, in fact, was no politician ; the changes of states and empires made but little impression on him; but there was one species of despotism under which he had long groaned, and that was petticoat government. Happily that was at an end; he had got his neck out of the yoke of matrimony, and could go in and out when- ever he pleased, without dreading the tyranny of Dame Van Winkle. Whenever her name was mentioned, however, he shook his head, shrugged his shoulders, and cast up his eyes; which might pass either for an expression of resignation to his fate, or joy at his deliverance. He used to tell his story to every stranger that arrived at Mr. Doolittle's hotel. He was observed, at first, to vary on some points every time he told it, which was, doubtless, owing to his having so recently awaked. It at last settled down precisely to the tale I have re- lated, and not a man, woman, or child in the neighborhood, but knew it by heart. Some

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always pretended to doubt the reality of it, and insisted that Rip had been out of his head, and that this was one point on which he al- ways remained flighty. The old Dutch in- habitants, however, almost universally gave it full credit. Even to this day they never hear a thunderstorm of a summer afternoon about the Kaatskill, but they say Hendrick Hudson and his crew are at their game of nine-pins in the neighborhood, when life hangs heavy on their hands, that they might have a quieting draught out of Rip Van Winkle's flagon.

The story of Rip Van Winkle may seem in- credible to many, but nevertheless I give it my full belief, for I know the vicinity of our old Dutch settlements to have been very sub- ject to marvelous events and appearances. Indeed, I have heard many stranger stories than this, in the villages along the Hudson; all of which were too well authenticated to admit of a doubt. I have even talked with Rip Van Winkle myself, who, when last I saw him, was a venerable old man, and so per- fectly rational and consistent on every other point, that I think no conscientious person could refuse to take this into the bargain; nay, I have seen a certificate on the subject taken before a country justice and signed

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with a cross, in the justice's own handwriting. The story, therefore, is beyond the possibility of doubt.

The Kaatsberg, or Catskill mountains, have always been a region full of fable. The In- dians considered them the abode of spirits, who influenced the weather, spreading sun- shine or clouds over the landscape, and send- ing good or bad hunting seasons. They were ruled by an old squaw spirit, said to be their mother. She dwelt on the highest peak of the Catskill, and had charge of the doors of day and night to open and shut them at the proper hour. She hung up the new moons in the skies, and cut up the old ones into stars. In times of drought, if properly propitiated, she would spin light summer clouds out of cobwebs and morning dew, and send them off from the crest of the mountain, flake after flake, like flakes of carded cotton, to float in the air; until, dissolved by the heat of the sun, they would fall in gentle showers, caus- ing the grass to spring, the fruits to ripen, and the corn to grow an inch an hour. If dis- pleased, however, she would brew up clouds black as ink, sitting in the midst of them like a bottle-bellied spider in the midst of its web; and when these clouds broke, woe betide the valleys!

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In old times, say the Indian traditions, there was a kind of Manitou or Spirit, who kept about the wildest recesses of the Cats- kill mountains, and took a mischievous pleas- ure in wreaking all kinds of evils and vexa- tions upon the red men. Sometimes he would assume the form of a bear, a panther, or a deer, lead the bewildered hunter a weary chase through tangled forests and among ragged rocks; and then spring off with a loud ho! ho! leaving him aghast on the brink of a beetling precipice or raging torrent.

The favorite abode of this Manitou is still shown. It is a great rock or cliff on the lone- liest part of the mountains, and from the flow- ering vines which clamber about it, and the wild flowers which abound in its neighborhood is known by the name of the Garden Rock. Near the foot of it is a small lake, the haunt of the solitary bittern, with water-snakes basking in the sun on the leaves of the pond- lilies which lie on the surface. This place was held in great awe by the Indians, insomuch that the boldest hunter would not pursue his game within its precincts. Once upon a time, however, a hunter who had lost his way, pen- etrated to the garden rock, where he beheld a number of gourds placed in the crotches of trees. One of these he seized and made off with

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it; but in the hurry of his retreat he let it fall among the rocks, when a great stream gushed forth, which washed him away and swept him down precipices, where he was dashed to pieces, and the stream made its way to the Hudson, and continues to flow to the present day; being the identical stream known by the name of the Kaaters-kill.

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Sunnyside

The Home of Many Memories

As our " Washington Irving" sails the bright waters of Tappan Zee he speaks familiarly of his dear Sunnyside as "The Roost" the "Wolfert Roost" of old Baltus Van Tassel and his fair daughter Katrina. Where Icha- bod Crane lingered that eventful night after all the guests were gone which preceded his dramatic ride with the "Headless Horseman" referred to more fully in his "Legend of Sleepy Hollow."

Irving aptly described Sunnyside as "made up of gable-ends, and full of angles and cor- ners as an old cocked hat. It is said, in fact, to have been modeled after the hat of Peter the Headstrong, as the Escurial of Spain was fashioned after the gridiron of the blessed St. Lawrence." Wolfert's Roost (Roost sig- nifying Rest) took its name from Wolfert

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Acker, a former owner. It consisted original- ly of ten acres when purchased by Irving in 1855, but several acres were afterwards added. With great humor Irving put above the porch entrance "George Harvey, Boum'r," Bou- meister being an old Dutch word for architect. A storm- worn weathercock, "which once bat- tled with the wind on the top of the Stadt House of New Amsterdam in the time of Peter Stuyvesant, erects his crest on the gable, and a gilded horse in full gallop, once the weather- cock of the great Van der Heyden palace of Albany, glitters in the sunshine, veering with every breeze, on the peaked turret over the portal."

About fifty years ago a cutting of Walter Scott's favorite ivy at Melrose Abbey was transported across the Atlantic, and trained over the porch of "Sunnyside," by the hand of Mrs. Renwick, daughter of Rev. Andrew Jeffrey of Lochmaben, known in girlhood as the "Bonnie Jessie" of Annandale, or the "Blue-eyed Lassie" of Robert Burns: a grace- ful tribute, from the shrine of Waverly to the nest of Knickerbocker:

A token of friendship immortal

With Washington Irving returns!

Scott's ivy entwined o'er its portal By the Blue-eyed Lassie of Burns.

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Scott's cordial greeting at Abbotsford, and his persistence in getting Murray to reconsid- er the publication of the "Sketch Book," which he had previously declined, were never forgotten by Irving. It was during a critical period of his literary career, and the kindness of the Great Magician, in directing early at- tention to his genius, is still cherished by every reader of the " Sketch Book" from Man- hattan to San Francisco. The hearty grasp of the minstrel at the gateway of Abbotsford was in reality a warm handshake to a wider brotherhood beyond the sea.

While he was building "Sunnyside" a letter came from Daniel Webster, then Sec- retary of State, appointing him minister to Spain. It was unexpected and unsolicited, and Webster remarked that day to a friend: "Washington Irving today will be the most surprised man in America." Irving had al- ready shown diplomatic ability in London in promoting the settlement of the "Northwest- ern Boundary," and his appointment was re- ceived with universal favor. Then as now Sunnyside was already a Mecca for travel- ers and, among many well known to fame, was a young man, afterwards Napoleon the Third. Referring to his visit, Irving wrote in 1853: "Napoleon and Eugenie, Emperor and

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Empress! The one I have had as a guest at my cottage, the other I have held as a pet child upon my knee in Granada. The last I saw of Eugenie Montijo, she was one of the reign- ing belles of Madrid; now, she is upon the throne, launched from a returnless shore, upon a dangerous sea, infamous for its tremendous shipwrecks. Am I to live to see the catas- trophe of her career, and the end of this sud- denly conjured up empire, which seems to be of such stuff as dreams are made of! I con- fess my personal acquaintance with the in- dividuals in this historical romance gives me uncommon interest in it but I consider it stamped with danger and instability, and as liable to extravagant vicissitudes as one of Dumas' novels." A wonderful prophecy completely fulfilled in the short space of sev- enteen years.

Tappan Zee, at this point, is a little more than two miles wide and over the beautiful expanse Irving has thrown a wondrous charm. There is, in fact, "magic in the web" of all his works. A few modern critics, lacking appre- ciation alike for humor and genius, may re- gard his essays as a thing of the past, but as long as the Mahicanituk, the ever-flowing Hudson, pours its waters to the sea, as long as Rip Van Winkle sleeps in the blue Catskills

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or the "Headless Horseman" rides at midnight along the Old Post Road en route for Teller's Point, so long will the writings of Washington Irving be remembered and cherished. We somehow feel the reality of every legend he has given us. The spring bubbling up near his cottage was brought over, as he gravely tells us, in a churn from Holland by one of the old time settlers, and we are half inclined to believe it ; and no one ever thinks of doubting that the "Flying Dutchman," Mynheer Van Dam, has been rowing for two hundred years and never made a port. It is in fact still said by the old inhabitants, that often in the soft twilight of summer evenings, when the sea is like glass and the opposite hills throw their shadows across it, that the low vigorous pull of oars is heard but no boat is seen.

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The Dreamland of the Pocantico and Sleepy Hollow

The old time Dreamland of Washington Irving has been consecrated since 1859 as his resting place where worshippers come with reverend footsteps to read on the plain slab this simple inscription: "Washington Irving, born April 3, 1783. Died November 28, 1859," and recall Longfellow's beautiful lines :

"Here lies the gentle humorist, who died In the bright Indian Summer of his fame, A simple stone, with but a date and name,

Marks his secluded resting-place beside

The river that he loved and glorified. Here in the autumn of his days he came, But the dry leaves of life were all aflame

With tints that brightened and were multiplied.

How sweet a life was his, how sweet a death;

Living to wing with mirth the weary hours, Or with romantic tales the heart to cheer ;

Dying to leave a memory like the breath

Of Summers full of sunshine and of showers, A grief and gladness in the atmosphere."

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Sleepy Hollow Church, like Sunnyside, is hidden away from the steamer tourist by summer foliage. Just before reaching King- ston Point lighthouse, a view, looking north- east up the little bay to the right, will sometimes give the outline of the building. Beyond this a tall granite shaft, erected by the Dele van family, is generally quite distinctly seen, and this is near the grave of Irving. A light- house, built in 1883, marks the point where the Pocantico or Sleepy Hollow Creek joins the Hudson:

Pocantico 's hushed waters glide

Through Sleepy Hollow's haunted ground,

And whisper to the listening tide

The name carved o'er one lowly mound.

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Washington Irving at Home and Abroad

His writings, journeys, associations and his life, by Wallace Bruce

The memory of Washington Irving rests like a ray of sunshine upon the pages of our early history. Born in 1783, at the close of the great struggle for Independence, his life of seventy-six years marks a period of growth and material progress, the pages of which we have just been turning, and it is peculiarly fitting to consider at this time in the morning of our Twentieth Century the life and ser- vices of our sweetest writer the best rep- resentative of our early culture.

It is my purpose to consider his writings, his associations, and his life, and I take up his works in the order in which they were written, as in this way we trace the natural develop- ment of the writer and the man.

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"Knickerbocker," his earliest work, writ- ten at the age of twenty-six, bears the same relation to his later works as "Pickwick," the first heir of Dickens' invention, to his novels that follow. And there is another point of similarity in the fact that "Knickerbocker" and "Pickwick" both outgrew the original design of the authors : neither Irving nor Dick- ens, when he took pen in hand, had any idea of the character of the work he was to produce. The philosophic and benevolent Pickwick was barely rescued from being the head of a Nimrod Hunting Club, with a character cut to fit a series of drawings that had been pur- chased from the wife of a needy artist by a second-class publishing house in London; and the idea of "Knickerbocker" at first was sim- ply to parody a small hand-book which had recently appeared, entitled "A Picture of New York." Following this plan, a humor- ous description of the early governors of New Amsterdam was intended merely as a preface to the customs and institutions of the city but like Buckle's "History of Civilization," the preface became the body of the book, and all idea of a parody was early and happily abandoned. The rise and fall of the Dutch domination presented a subject of poetic unity. In the character of the pseudo-

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historian we have the representative of a race whose customs were fast passing away, and the serio-comic nature of the work is intensi- fied, and as it were italicized, at the very out- set by notices in the New York Evening Post and other journals calling attention to the mysterious disappearance of Diedrich Knick- erbocker.

Never was any volume more happily in- troduced. Before we turn a single page of the book we have an idea of the veritable writer. We see him the representative of a noble Dutch family first cousin of the renowned Con- gressman of Schaghticoke. We become in- terested in the mystery that surrounds him; in fact, the great charm of the book is in the semi-reality, or assumed personality, of Deid- rich Knickerbocker. The portrait of Don Quixote, so familiar to every one, starting out from La Mancha to redress the wrongs of the world, is not more clearly drawn and has no more reality in our minds than the historian of New Amsterdam, with his silver shoe- buckles and cocked hat, trudging along the old post-road from village to village. But there is this difference in the mind of the read- er: in the great satire of Cervantes there is an element of sadness. We see a crazed old gentleman going out in quest of adventures

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exciting our pity, almost excusing the para- dox of Lord Byron, "The saddest of all tales, and more sad because it makes us laugh;" but here there is only a mild sort of insanity about the old gentleman with his books and papers, wandering off on long excursions that touches our humor without exciting our sym- pathy. We see as it were only a touch of the same malady which belongs to all writers "seeking after immortality;" and, by the way, the books of humor we have here associated "Pickwick," "Don Quixote," and "Knicker- bocker"— belong to the same family, can be profitably studied together, and ought to stand upon the same shelf in our libraries. The philosopher Hume said "a turn for humor was worth to him ten thousand a year," and perhaps if this remark had been fully ex- plained to the early members of the New York Historical Society to whom, by the way, the volume was first dedicated the fol- lowing paragraph might have been omitted from our Colonial History: "It is the misfor- tune of this State," the writer says, speaking of New York, "that its early founders have been held up to the ridicule of the world by one of its most gifted sons, who has exhausted the resources of his wit and satire in exposing imaginary traits in their characters, while the

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most polished efforts of his graver style have been reserved to adorn the Corinthian columns of the more aristocratic institutions of foreign countries. Founders of ancient dynasties have sometimes been deified by their successors. New York is perhaps the only commonwealth whose founders have been covered with ridi- cule from the same quarter." Some of the old Holland families are also reported to have taken the work in high dudgeon as a rash in- vasion of the domain of history; and I believe one of the gentle sex in Albany, who perhaps had no brother or lover to fight a duel, pro- posed herself with her own hands to horse- whip the offensive writer for his bold attempt, forsooth, at spelling and printing for the first time some of the old family names.

From today's standpoint these things seem ludicrous and uncalled for in reference to a work abounding in kindly humor, everywhere accepted as the finest blending of the classic and the comic in our literature; and were it not that these early enemies soon became his warmest friends, I would certainly pass it over in silence; but the transition was so sudden and sincere that it is one of the pleasantest features in his history, and Irving himself when preparing his revised edition, refers to the matter with evident satisfaction in a pref-

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atory article facetiously styled "The Author's Apology." "When I find, after a lapse of forty years, this haphazard production of my youth still cherished among the descendants of the Dutch worthies; when I find its very name become a household word, and used to give the home-stamp to everything recom- mended for popular acceptance, such as Knickerbocker societies, Knickerbocker in- surance companies, Knickerbocker steam- boats, Knickerbocker omnibuses, Knicker- bocker's bread, and Knickerbocker ice; and when I find New Yorkers of Dutch descent priding themselves upon being genuine Knick- erbockers— I please myself with the persuasion that I have struck the right chord; that my dealings with the good old Dutch times, and the customs and usages derived from them, are in harmony with the feelings and humors of my townsmen; that I have opened a vein of pleasant associations and quaint character- istics peculiar to my native place, and which its inhabitants will not willingly suffer to pass away; and that, though other histories of New York may appear of higher claim to learned acceptance, and may take their appropriate and dignified rank in the family library, Knick- erbocker's history will still be received with good-humored intelligence, and be thumbed

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and chuckled over by the family fireside " It was indeed wide from the sober aim of history, but no volume ever gave such rose- tint colors to the early annals of any country, and New York, instead of being covered with ridicule, is today the only State of this Union whose early history is associated with the gold- en age of poetry, with "an antiquity extend- ing back into the regions of doubt and fable," and it is safe to say that the streams of Scot- land are no more indebted to the genius of Robert Burns and Walter Scott than the Hudson and the Catskills to the pen of Washington Irving.

So much for the introduction, the first re- ception, and the success of "Knickerbocker;" but I cannot refrain, in passng, from giving a few illustrations from this most picturesque of histories. Perhaps the sketch of the first governor of New Amsterdam is one of the happiest in its outline and general filling:

"The renowned Wouter Van Twiller was descended from a long line of Dutch burgo- masters, who had comported themselves with such singular wisdom and propriety that they were never either heard or talked of, which, next to being universally applauded, should be the ambition of all magistrates. He was a man shut up within himself, like an oyster; but then it was allowed he seldom said a foolish

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thing. So invincible was his gravity that he was never known either to laugh or to smile through the whole course of a long and pros- perous life. Nay, if a joke were uttered in his presence that set light-minded hearers in a roar, it was observed to throw him into a state of perplexity. He was exactly five feet six inches in height, and six feet five inches circumference. His face, that infallible index of the mind, presented a vast expanse unf urrow- ed by any of those lines or angles which dis- figure the human countenance with what is termed expression, He daily took his four stated meals, appropriating exactly an hour to each. He smoked and doubted eight hours, and slept the remaining twelve of the four-and-twenty. Such was the renowned Wouter Van Twiller governor of the golden age of the province." "Honest days," as the historian proceeds, "when every woman wore pockets, aye, and that, too, of a goodly size, fashioned with patchwork into many curious devices and ostentatiously worn on the outside. These, in fact, were conven- ient receptacles where all good housewives carefully stored away such things as they wished to have at hand, by which means they often came to be incredibly crammed; and I remember there was a story current when I

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was a boy that the lady of Wouter Van Twil- ler once had occasion to empty her right pock- et in search of a wooden ladle, when the con- tents filled a couple of corn baskets, and the utensil was discovered lying among some rub- bish in one corner, but we must not give too much faith to all these stories, the anecdotes of remote periods being very subject to ex- aggeration."

I pass over the tea parties and parlor gath- erings, the dress and manners, his chapters of philosophy and those "happy days of prime- val simplicity when there were neither public commotions nor private quarrels, neither par- ties nor sects nor schisms, neither persecu- tions nor trials nor punishments; when every man attended to what little business he was lucky enough to have, or neglected it, if he pleased, without asking the opinion of his neighbor; when nobody meddled with con- cerns above his comprehension, nor neglected to correct his own conduct in his zeal to pull to pieces the characters of others." I pass over the days of William the Testy, who first in- troduced the art of fighting by proclamation the inroads of the Yankees with their witch- craft— their inventions, their schoolmasters, and wandering propensities who "required only an inch to gain an ell, or a halter to gain

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a horse; who from the time they first gained a foothold on Plymouth Rock began to mi- grate, progressing and progressing from place to place, making a little here and a little there, and controverting the old proverb that a roll- ing stone gathers no moss. Hence they have facetiously received the nickname of the Pil- grims,— that is to say, a people who are al- ways seeking a better country than their own." We see Antony Van Corlear, the celebrated trumpeter, on his diplomatic mission up the Hudson a chapter too dramatic for these degenerate days. We see the noble army of Peter Stuyvesant passing in review before us, and come with sorrow to the brief line in which the chivalric hero is gathered to his fathers "Well, den, hardkoppig Peter ben gone at last." { In his first volume we would naturally look for his peculiar characteristics as a writer, and we find a rich vein of humor and invention; but here and there are gentle touches and the promise of other qualities! to which Walter Scott refers in a letter to Henry Brevoort:

"I have never read anything so closely re- sembling the style of Dean Swift as the 'An- nals of Diedrich Knickerbocker.' I have been employed these few evenings in reading them aloud to Mrs. Scott and two ladies who are our guests, and our sides have been absolutely

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sore with laughing. I think, too, there are passages which indicate that the author pos- sesses powers of a different kind, and has some touches which remind me much of Sterne. I beg you will have the kindness to let me know when Mr. Irving takes pen in hand again; for assuredly I shall expect a very great treat, which I may chance never to hear of but through your kindness."

The prophecy of Scott waited ten years for its fulfilment, but it came at last in the most charming collection of essays in our language the "Sketch Book" which I divide into es- says of character and sentiment, English pic- tures and American legends. As representa- tives of the first I take "The Broken Heart," "The Wife," "The Widow and Her Son."

"The Broken Heart," perhaps the greatest favorite of his character sketches and the best transcript of his own early experience, seems to me a gem in our literature. In the short space of six pages he portrays the finer quali- ties of woman's nature, and illustrates it with the touching story of Curran's daughter, whose heart was buried in the coffin of Robert Emmet. This essay was suggested by a friend who had seen the heroine at a masquerade and heard the plaintive song which melted every one to tears :

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"She is far from the land where her young hero sleeps.

She sings the wild songs of her dear native plains,

Every note which he loved awaking. Ah! little they think who delight in her strains

How the heart of the minstrel is breaking."

In the whole range of English literature I know of no pen except Irving's which could have written an essay like this in plain and simple prose. We find the same tender senti- ment in "Highland Mary" and "Annabel Lee;" but poetry is the natural language of passion and sorrow. Irving had often been likened to Addison, but in this particular they have noth- ing in common. Edward Everett has well said: "One chord in the human heart, the pathetic, for whose sweet music Addison had no ear, Irving touched with the hand of a mas- ter. He learned that skill in the school of early disappointment." And in the following passage we seem to hear its sad but sweet vibra- tion still responding through ten years of sor- row to the memory of her whose hopes were entwined with his: "There are some strokes of calamity which scathe and scorch the soul, which penetrate to the vital seat of happiness and blast it, never again to put forth bud and blossom; and let those tell her agony who have had the portals of the tomb suddenly closed

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between them and the being they most loved on earth; who have sat at its threshold as one shut out in a cold and lonely world whence all that was most lovely and loving had departed."

It is said when Lord Byron was dying at Mis- silonghi that he requested his attendant to read to him "The Broken Heart." While he was reading one of the most touching portions the poet's eyes moistened and he said, "Irving nev- er wrote that story without weeping, nor can I hear it without tears;" and he added, "I have not wept much in this world, for trouble never brings tears to my eyes, but I always have tears for 'The Broken Heart.' '

Soon after its publication in England, Irving met Mrs. Siddons. After his introduction the queen of tragedy looked at him for a moment and then, in her clear, deep-toned voice, she slowly enunciated, "You have made me weep." As Pierre Irving remarks in his "Life and Let- ters," "Nothing could have been finer than such a compliment from such a source, but the ' ac- cost' was so abrupt and the manner so peculiar that our modest writer was completely discon- certed." Some time afterward, after the ap- pearance of his "Bracebridge Hall," they again met, and singularly enough she addressed him in the self-same fashion "You've made me weep again." "Ah!" replied Irving, "but you

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taught me first to weep," as he called up his first visit to London, fifteen years before the "Sketch-Book" was written and the then won- derful power of this actress without a rival.

Kindred to this essay which we have just con- sidered, and well suited as a companion-sketch, I select "The Wife," a true picture of woman's power in adversity. As the story goes, his friend Leslie had married a beautiful and ac- complished girl, and, having an ample fortune it was his ambition that her life should be a fairy-tale; but one day, having embarked in speculation, his riches took to themselves wings and he found himself reduced almost to penury. For a time he keeps his situation to himself, but every look reveals his sorrow. When at last he tells his story and we see her rising from a state of childish dependence, becoming the support and comfort of her husband in his mis- fortune, and follow them from a mansion to a cottage, we feel that the last state of that man is better than the first. In the knowledge and possession of such a heart he had truer riches than diamonds can symbolize, and to the credit of our better nature the words of Irving are true: "There is in every true woman's heart a spark of heavenly fire which lies dormant in the broad daylight of prosperity, but which kindles up and beams and blazes in the dark hour of

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adversity. No man knows what the wife of his bosom is; no man knows what a ministering angel she is, until he has gone with her through the fiery trials of this world." What a beauti- ful simile is this: "As the vine which has long twined its graceful foliage about the oak, and been lifted by it into sunshine, will, when the hardy plant is rifted by the thunderbolt, cling round it with its caressing tendrils and bind up its shattered boughs, so is it beautifully ordered by Providence that woman, who is the mere de- pendent and ornament of man in his happier hours, should be his stay and solace when smit- ten by sudden calamity, winding herself into the rugged recesses of his nature, tenderly sup- porting the drooping head and binding up the broken heart."

Outside of the drama of Shakespeare and the pages of Walter Scott, I know of no pictures of graceful womanhood so complete as those found in Irving's Sketch Book. It is said that the original of which this character is a copy, was the wife of the poet Morris; and perhaps the following incident gave rise to the suggestion which shows how little truth popular rumor needs for a sustaining diet. While minister at Spain he received a letter from his brother say- ing that General Morris requested permission to publish his story of "The Wife" in a periodi-

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cal of which he was proprietor, and Irving facetiously responded, "Give my regards to General Morris, and tell him he is quite wel- come to my wife, which is more than most of his friends could say." (Perhaps Rip Van Winkle would have been willing to have thrown in his.)

The other sketch to which we call attention in our division of character and sentiment "The Widow and her Son" is one of the most pathetic in the " Sketch Book," and follows naturally the two we have just considered. It seems to round out and complete Irving's idea of womanhood as seen in a maiden's life, a wife's devotion, and a mother's love. What depths of feeling in passages like this: "Oh! there is an enduring tenderness in the love of a mother to her son that transcends all other af- fections of the heart. It is neither to be chilled by selfishness, nor daunted by danger, nor weakened by worthlessness, nor stifled by in- gratitude. She will sacrifice every comfort to his convenience ; she will surrender every pleas- ure to his enjoyment ; she will glory in his fame and exult in his prosperity; and, if misfortune overtake him, he will be the dearer to her from misfortune; and, if disgrace settle upon his name, she will still love and cherish him in spite of his disgrace; and, if all the world

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beside cast him off, she will be all the world to him."

There are few passages in prose or poetry more touching than the description of the mother's effort to put on something like mourn- ing for her only son a black ribbon or so, a faded black handkerchief showing the strug- gle between pious affection and utter poverty.

All through these essays we seem to see a gentle spirit clouded by some great sorrow, yet cheerful in spite of misfortune. What a change has come over him since "Knickerbocker"! Lord Bacon says, "It is more pleasing to have a lively work upon a sad and solemn ground than to have a dark and melancholy work upon a lightsome ground." This may be true in pic- tures, but not in character; for the principal element in that happy compound a genuine man or woman is cheerfulness, and disposi- tion naturally gloomy and foreboding is rarely ever so thoroughly irradiated, even by the light of heaven, that we are not chilled by con- tact. Misanthropy never improves by years: it is a heart-thermometer ever below freezing- point even in the sunlight of prosperity. But there are natures so bright and lightsome that no clouds of misfortune can hide their cheering radiance; mellowed by sorrow, and tempered by adversity, they shine forth in gentle gleams,

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full of genial and tender expression; and I think this distinction is one your own reading will justify: that we find in these essays a bright spirit sobered by sorrow, but look in vain for a line of misanthropy.

There is another element in Irving's composi- tion no less marked than his humor and pathos a reverence for antiquity which forms a marked feature in the essays that we designate as English pictures. In his "Rural Life" and "Christmas Sketches" we see his love for the old English writers, and recognize the fact that Chaucer and Spenser were among his favorite authors. These early poets were to him something more than "wells of English undefiledo" They are rather like the lakes of the Adirondacks, separated from each other and from us by events which loom up like mountains in the world's history, clear and cool in far-off solitudes, reflecting in their bright mirrors the serenity of earth and the broad expanse of heaven, responding to the gentle glow of summer sunsets, holding quiet communion with the evening stars, and awak- ing to rosy life at the first touch of morning.

The old English ballads have all the sparkles the energy, and rhythm of our mountain streams, but Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, and Bunyon are the fountains from which flows

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the river ay, the Hudson of our language. Irving's mind was early turned to these sources of our literature, and we find the result of this study a pure and classic style. What a beautiful acknowledgment is this: "The pas- toral writers of other countries appear as if they had paid nature an occasional visit and become acquainted with her general charms, but the British poets have lived and revelled with her; they have wooed her in her most secret haunts; they have watched her minut- est caprices; a spray could not tremble in the breeze, a leaf could not rustle to the ground, a diamond drop could not patter in the stream, a fragance could not exhale from the humble vio- let, nor a daisy unfold its crimson tints to the morning, but it has been noticed by these im- passioned and delicate observers and wrought up into some beautiful morality."

With this deep love for the old masters of English literature, we are not surprised that Westminster Abbey, with its Poet's Corner, should be the subject of one of his earliest es- says; and the principal feature of this essay, and that which makes it the enduring one of all that have been written on this venerable pile, is the native quality of reverence and sin- cerity. And it is indeed pleasant in days, when flippant writing is often received for wit

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and misspelled slang accepted for originality to turn to these essays in which we see the nobil- ity of a royal heart, and feel that "Truth and Good and Beauty the offspring of God are not subject to the changes which beset the in- vention of men." I make no quotation from this familiar essay. It possesses too much unity to detach a paragraph or a sentence. I can only say I read it over and over with the name interest today as years ago in the deep shadow of that melancholy aisle at the tomb of the unfortunate Mary Queen of Scots.

There is one other place in England where I rook my pocket edition of the "Sketch Book," to Stratf ord-on-Avon ; for, more than any other man, Irving is associated with the home and burial-place of the world's greatest poet. Writers without number, and many well known to fame, have given their impressions of Strat- ford, but Irving's description supersedes them all. It seems as if the quiet and pensive char- acter of the man fits into the rural scenery of England ay! as if the hills and woodlands of Warwickshire, recognizing a kindred spirit to their gentle Shakespeare, after the laspe of three centuries, had associated in enduring framework and sweet companionship the liv- ing presence of our gentlest writer. What a wonderful blending of the old and the new!

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Two hundred and fifty years of progress, of struggle and invention! A new nation rising into being, with its material trinity the steam-engine, the printing-press, and the tele- graph. The single newspaper of Queen Eliza- beth unfolding in every town and city its crowded columns of daily and hourly records from every quarter of the globe. Ariel and Puck, at last thoroughly materialized, and dressed in comely muslin, whisper to each other across a continent, and beyond the Ber- mudas, to the far-off islands of the sea. It seems, indeed, a new world, separated from the old by greater spaces than waste of waters or the lapse of years; but in this companionship of Shakespeare and Irving we see the enduring qualities of the human heart. In the deep sympathy of Irving's nature for the olden time we feel that he has added another charm to Stratford that we, as a nation, have a better claim to the great poet. We muse at his grave. We wander along the gently-flowing Avon, we rest beneath the great oaks of Sir Thomas Lucy, We pick flowers in the garden of Ann Hatha- way's cottage; it seems as if Irving in some way belongs here too, and we are not at all certain if the Bacon theory is established but that Irving will come in for his share of the dramas, as author of the "Midsummer Night's

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Dream" or the "Merry Wives of Windsor." To pass from the very centre of "Merrie England," with its hallowed associations and rich inheritance of centuries, to the mountains and valleys of our own country, would be a sudden transition if the space were not bridged over and the distance dissipated in one of the closing paragraphs of this essay: "I had been walking all day in a complete delusion. I had surveyed the landscape through the prism of poetry, which had tinged every object with the hues of the rainbow. I had been sur- rounded with fancied beings, with mere airy nothings conjured up by poetic power, yet which to me had all the charm of reality; and I could but reflect on the singular gift of the poet, to be able thus to spread the magic of his mind over the very face of nature, to give to things and places a charm and character not their own, and to turn this working day world into a perfect fairy-land."

In this passage we find the best description of Irving's own creative faculty. This wizard influence which the traveller experiences at Stratford is equally felt along the banks of the Hudson. The whole landscape, from the Palisades to the Catskills, is seen today through the prism of poetry the magic of his mind spread over the loveliest vale of the fairest

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stream that flows, and this working-day world converted into a perfect fairy-land.

It is said that "walls must get the weather- stain before they grow the ivy;" that legends like ghosts flourish best in an uncertain twi- light, or

"Where auld ruined castles gray Nod to the moon."

We expect to find legends flourishing in the gloaming mountains of old Scotland. We have easy faith for the Knights of the Round Table, the Tales of Robin Hood and the brave outlaws of Sherwood Forest. We see the frozen my- thology of Scandinavia every day melting into poetry, like the fabled words of Plato or the thawed-out music of Baron Munchausen's flute. We read the story of Undine and Hilde- brand, the "Arabian Nights," the prowess of the Cid, and the warm troubadour chivalry of southern Europe; but what have we to do with legends and poetry in the broad sunlight of the nineteenth century? These have no place when facts and history pre-empt the soil.

Yes! but this adds to the wonder and charm of Irving's creative power! the romance of Europe was to be had for the gleaning. In America it had to be created; and the wonder is that this which sprang up in a night is more real than the legends which have grown and

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blossomed for a thousand years. He touched the mountains and the valleys with the wand of his fancy, and they were peopled with beings more substantial than fairies, more real than history. In his "Rip Van Winkle" and "Legend of Sleepy Hollow," which I take as illustrations of his American legends, we at once see that he is one of the few writers who appreciate the fact that comedy is quite as natural as tragedy. At every step in the story we see the impossible; but after all we feel that it is none the less real. Bryant's poem, "The Kaaterskill Falls," is at once full of unity, possibility, and beauty; but it is a dream compared with the "Legend of Rip Van Winkle." At the time it was written we understand that Irving had never visited the Catskill Mountains; in the legend itself we see traces of a German superstition; but there is this feature in all his stories: wherever he located them they seem at once to take root and flourish. This story is too well known, to need delineation. The old Dutch village, with its philosophers and sages; the shiftless but good-natured Van Winkle; the strange ad- venture on the mountain; the return it all passes before our mind like a series of pictures: and we come to the closing scene, which the play-writer would have done well to follow; for there is more dramatic unity in the story

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than in the drama. "Does nobody here know Rip Van Winkle?" "Oh! Rip Van Winkle," exclaimed two or three. "Oh! to be sure; there's Rip Van Winkle yonder, leaning against a tree." Rip looked, and beheld a precise counterpart of himself as he went up the moun- tain, apparently as lazy and certainly as ragged. The poor fellow was now completely confound- ed. He doubted his own identity, and whether he was himself— or another man. In the midst of his bewilderment it was again de- manded what was his name. "God knows!" exclaimed he, at his wits' end. "I'm not myself. I'm some one else. That's me yon- der— no, that's somebody else got into my shoes. I was myself last night, but I fell asleep on the mountains, and they've changed my gun, and everything's changed, and I'm changed, and I cannot tell what's my name or who I am." At this critical moment a fresh comely woman pressed through the throng to get a peep at the gray-bearded man. She had a chubby child in her arms which, frightened at his looks, began to cry. "Hush, Rip," cried she, "the old man won't hurt you." The name of the child, the air of the mother, the tone of the voice, all awakened a train of recollections in his mind. " What is your name my good woman?" asked he. "Judith Gar-

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denier." "And your father's name?" "Oh, poor man! Rip Van Winkle was his name. It's twenty years since he went away from home with his gun, and has never been heard of since. His dog came home without him; but whether he shot himself or was carried away by the Indians nobody can tell. I was then but a little girl." Rip had but one ques- tion more to ask, but he put it with a faltering voice. "Where's your mother?" "Oh! she, too, died but a short time since. She broke a blood-vessel in a fit of passion at a New Eng- land pedler." There was a drop of comfort, at least, in this intelligence. The honest man could control himself no longer. He caught his daughter and child in his arms. "I am your father!" cried he. "Young Rip Van Winkle once, old Rip Van Winkle now. Does nobody here know poor Rip Van Winkle?"

This touch of humor, even in the most in- tense part of the drama, is entirely consistent and does not disturb in the least its charming reality. The same element is still more marked in the "Legend of Sleepy Hollow." and per- haps even in greater degree illustrates the reality of Irving's legends their power of taking root and flourishing even in the midst of history.

On the old post-road, half way between Tarrytown and Sleepy Hollow, a monument

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marks the spot where Major Andre was cap- tured, erected in 1853 by the county of West- chester to the memory of the brave men who could not be tempted by British gold. But this marble shaft with its beautifi.1 inscription lack the magnetic influence and the heartfelt interest of the plain headstone in the burial- yard of Sleepy Hollow; for in the universal heart of mankind the poet's corner is dearer than the hero's tomb, although, as here, the hero springs from the common people, and his monument commemorates the highest and the rarest courage the heroism of honesty!

Nay, more; the United States Government, in remembrance of Paulding's courage, gave him a large tract of land in Ohio, and from this revenue one of his sons built one of the finest villas on the Hudson; but the traveller today along our river, even the most loyal American, who spells his country's name with a good- sized capital letter and rightly considers it the first in the alphabet of nations, turns with a deeper reverence and a truer love to a little cottage near at hand, with its quaint turrets and gables looking out on the tranquil waters of Tappan Zee, the quiet home of Diedrich Knickerbocker the Dutch Herodotus the writer of the gentle heart.

Everything that Irving has written about

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Tarry town seems to partake of the drowsy, dreamy influence that pervades the very at- mosphere. The "Legend of Sleepy Hollow" seems as native to the soil as the bright, honest- faced flowers of their snug-sheltered gardens. As Darwin or Huxley would say, I Irving's stories fit themselves to the environments. They belong to the age and the time which they represent.! What a natural picture, one we all have seen, is this of old Baltus Van Tassel dozing his life away in solid comfort, his bustling dame completely occupied with her housekeeping and her poultry, letting her rosy- cheeked daughter Katrina do just as she pleas- ed, adding a sage and sensible observation fully appreciated by each generation and which may some day be endorsed by colleges and institu- tions of learning, that "ducks and geese are foolish things and must be looked after, but girls can take care of themselves." We are in- troduced to Ichabod Crane, the Yankee school- master of the neighborhood, and Brom Bones, his dangerous rival for the hand and fortune of Katrina. They meet at a quilting-party at the house of Mynheer Van Tassel, where we are entertained with ghostly stories of the olden time, including a marvelous adventure of Brom Bones with the well-known goblin-rider, the Headless Hessian of Sleepy Hollow.

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Ichabod lingers after the company disperses, the custom, I believe, of old-time lovers; but something must have gone wrong in the interview, for "he sallies forth with an air quite desolate and chopfallen, and now at the very witching time of night he mounts his steed for his homeward journey. Unluckily, his route was the very road over which the headless horseman was wont to ride. The night grew darker and darker. The stars seemed to sink deeper in the sky. He had nevzr felt so lonely and miserable. He passed the fearful tree where Major Andre was captured, but in the dark shadow of the grove, on the margin of the brook, he beheld something huge, misshapen, black, and towering. The hair of the affright- ed pedagogue rose upon his head with terror. To turn and fly was now too late, for with a scramble and a bound the shadowy object put itself into motion and stood at once in the mid- dle of the road. Ichabod bethought himself of the galloping Hessian, and quickened his steed with the hopes of leaving him behind. The stranger, however, quickened his horse to an equal pace. Ichabod pulled up and fell into a walk. The strange horseman did the same. His heart began to sink within him. He en- deavored to sing a psalm-tune, but his parched tongue clove to the roof of his mouth. There

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was something in the silence of his strange com- panion at once mysterious and appalling. It was soon fearfully accounted for. On mount- ing a rising ground, which brought the figure of his fellow-traveller in relief against the sky, gigantic in height and muffled in a cloak, Icha- bod was horror-struck on perceiving that he was headless, but his horror was still more in- creased on observing that the head, which should have rested on his shoulders, was car- ried before him on the pommel of the saddle." His terror rose to desperation, and, like Caius Cassius in Macaulay's poem of the "Battle of Lake Regillus," he rode "for death and life;" but the spectre started full jump with him. "Away, then, they dashed through thick and thin, stones flying and sparks flashing at every bound. Ichabod's flimsy garments fluttered in the air as he stretched his long, lank body away over his horse's head in the eagerness of his flight. 'If I can but reach the bridge,' thought Ichabod, 'I'm safe.' Just then he heard the black steed panting and blowing close behind him. He even fancied that he felt his hot breath. Another convulsive kick, and his steed sprang upon the bridge. He thundered over the resounding planks. He gained the opposite side. Then he saw the goblin rising in his stirrups, and in the very act of launching

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his head at him. He endeavored to dodge the horrible missile, but too late. It encountered his cranium with a tremendous crash. He was tumbled headlong into the dust, and the black steed and the goblin-rider passed by like a whirlwind. The next day a saddle was found trampled in the dirt ; the tracks of horses deep- ly dented in the road, evidently at furious speed, were traced to the bridge, beyond which, on the bank of a broad part of the brook, where the water ran deep and black, was found the hat of the unfortunate Ichabod, and close be- side it a shattered pumpkin."

Throughout the entire race we are reminded of the midnight ride of Tarn o'Shanter when pursued by witches, and his strange adventure at the Bridge of Doon. In fact, the old Dutch church is not a bad representation of old Allo- way Kirk, and there is still greater resemblance in the fact that the reality of the poem and the reality of the story are not in the least affected by the humorous catastrophe.

The legends of "Sleepy Hollow" and "Rip Van Winkle" were introduced in the "Sketch Book" as having been found among the papers of the late Diedrich Knickerbocker. In touch- es of humor and gentleness of spirit they are entirely consistent with the old gentleman's character. The wit and humor are always

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kindly, and these qualities find happy illustra- tion in the fact that Mr. Jesse Merwin, the original of Ichabod Crane, whom Irving met at the house of Judge Van Ness, was always proud of the delineation, and returned the com- pliment in the sincerest way. Think of it! Truth is indeed stranger than fiction. Ichabod Crane survives the pumpkin catastrophe, woos and weds some other Katrina, and names a son after Washington Irving. After Irving's death a letter was found among his papers written by our Yankee schoolmaster, endorsed in Irv- ing's own handwriting "From Jesse Merwin the original of Ichabod Crane."

I have dwelt at length on the " Sketch Book," for in these essays the writer seems to have un- packed every quality of his style. We find Bracebridge Hall outlined in his "Christmas Sketches," the spirit of the Alhambra in "West- minster Abbey," and Knickerbocker in his "American Legends."

It is, moreover, one of the few books that never grow old. It belongs to the people, and is one of the best known of American books. A fine critic and scholar, George Sumner, said that the "Sketch Book" was more widely read in its original tongue than any in our language except the "Vicar of Wakefield," and Long- fellow, in an address before the Massachusetts

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Historical Society, pays it a beautiful tribute in the following poetic paragraph:

"Every reader has his first book, one among all others which first fascinates his imagination and excites and satisfies the desires of his mind To me this was the ' Sketch Book' of Washing- ton Irving. How many delightful works he has given us, written before and since! volumes of history and fiction which illustrate his native land, and some of which illuminate it and make the Hudson as romantic as the Rhine. Yet still the charm of the 'Sketch-Book' remains unbroken, the old fascination still lingers about tt, and whenever I open its pages, I open also ihat mysterious door which leads back into the haunted chambers of youth."

"Bracebridge Hall," his next volume, written at the suggestion of Thomas Moore, gives us a fine picture of old-fashioned English life. The book begins where most stories end with a wedding gathering; but when we are fairly introduced to the Hall and its hospitable pro- prietor, we are in no hurry for the wedding to take place. In the society of Lady Lilly-craft the old General, the tender-hearted Phoebe Wilkins, old Simon and Christy, we are con- tent to float on together for months, if need be, through a social dream of five hundred pages. I know of no gathering where the reader more

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thoroughly feels that he is an invited guest. The story has none of the characteristics of a novel. It possesses neither plot nor dramatic quality. The essays are strung together like beads on a slender thread, and the value is in the beads and not the string. We may forget the fair Julia and her brave Captain, but the sketch of the "Stout Gentleman" and "St. Mark's Eve" once read are never forgotten. We may forget the day after we read it whether the wedding took place in the morning or in the afternoon, whether the bride had eyes blue or hazel, or like most of lovers, had none at all; but the character of the old Squire, with his dogs, his whims and kindly heart, who "taught his boys to ride, and shoot, and speak the truth," taken an enduring hold on the memory, when we close the volume we feel that Lowell in his "Fable for the Critics" has given us in a dozen lines a genuine crayon sketch:

"But allow me to speak what I honestly feel;

To a true poet-heart add the fun of Dick Steele;

Throw in all of Addison minus the chill,

With the whole of that partnership, stock, and good-will

Mix well, and while stirring hum o'er as a spell

The fine old English gentleman: simmer it well.

Sweeten just to your own private liking; then strain,

That only the finest and clearest remain.

Let it stand out of doors till a soul it receives

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From the warm lazy sun loitering down through green

leaves And you'll have a choice nature not wholly deserving, A name either English or Yankee just Irving."

Next to "Bracebridge Hall," in order of pub- lication, we have the "Tales of a Traveller," to my mind the most unanchored of Irving's writ- ings, and therefore lacking for the most part the great charm and unity of his other essays, viz., local associations and attachments.

But, if any of his friends, on either side of the Atlantic, were disposed to be critical, their cen- sure was of short duration; for his next work the "Life and Voyages of Columbus," was a new departure in the right direction. This event the greatest in the annals of mankind, the most daring and romantic in the doman of truth, the sublime energy and perseverance of a man struggling with fate was a happy subject for his pen, and it was so carefully written, so graceful in style, and so accurate in research, that Lord Jeffrey remarks in the Edinburgh Re- view: "It will supersede every other work on the subject and never itself be superseded."

Compliments were now literally showered upon him on every hand. The Royal Society of Literature voted the new historian one of their fifty-guinea gold medals, and, with just pride, Irving writes to this brother, "What

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makes this the more gratifying is that the other medal is voted to Hallam, author of tjhe ' Mid- dle Ages.' "

There is an incident connected with this medal worthy of notice. Some years after his return to America, it was stolen from his brother's safe during a fire, but returned the same night by the thief, who slyly opened the door of his brother's residence and threw it into the hall. This medal melted down into a mass of shapeless gold, the work of an hour, would have been worth two hundred and fifty dollars. Even the robber had respect for the guinea- stamp when it bore the inscription of Washing- ton Irving.

^"The Chronicles of Granada," his next vol- ume, not only opens up, as the writer says, a tract of history which had been overrun with the weeds of fable, but also forms a natural in- troduction or threshold over which we pass from the "History of Columbus" to the "Tales of the Alhambra," aptly styled by Prescott "the beautiful Spanish Sketch Book."

His "Crayon Miscellany," published on his return from Europe, contains the "Tour on the Prairies" and the well-known essays, "Abbotts- ford" and "Newstead Abbey." Then follow the Spanish Legends, "Astoria" and the "Ad- ventures of Captain Bonneville." The "Life

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of Goldsmith" comes next in order a labor of sympathy and love. The " Life of Mahomet" shows his passion for Oriental history. " Wol- fe rt Roost," published at the age of seventy- two, is full of the old-time humor of "Sleepy Hollow," and brings us to the crowning labor the fitting capital of the column his "Life of Washington. "J

Wonderful as these volumes are, which even in this brief review seem to rise up before us like a new vision of the "Arabian Nights," in our literature they are only part and parcel of the poetry of his own experience. His pic- turesque and varied essays are the natural pro- duct of a varied and wandering life, and to feel the full beauty of his works we must read them in the light of his early and later history.

When seventeen years of age he made his first voyage up the Hudson, "in the good old times," as he expresses it, "before steamboats and railroads had driven all poetry and ro- mance out of travel." Three years later we see him in the northern wilderness of New York en route for Ogdensburg and Montreal a tedious journey in those days of corduroy roads and unbridged rivers. After his return, we find him at Ballston and Saratoga Springs, given up by his friends to die of consumption. The following year we see him in southern Europe,

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in quest of health at Marseilles, Genoa, and Sicily; at Rome, in company with Washington Allston, half persuaded by the enthusiasm of genius to try his own hand as an artist; at Paris, spending six months with profit and pleasure, judging from his brief journal and correspondence; then, through Belgium and Holland, to London, the great city of modern civilization yes, for centuries the university of the poet and writer, compared with which New York, with its strange mixture of eighty thousand inhabitants, must have seemed a par- ish school.

After two years' absence he returns with health restored, resumes his studies, and in his twenty-fourth year is admitted attorney-at-law. But the following year we find him pursuing the main business of his life viz., literature and travel. The first number of Salmagundi appears early in January. In March, his let- ters bear date Philadelphia; in May, Freder- icksburgh; in June, Richmond, drawn thither by the magnetism and trial of Aaron Burr. The following season he makes two trips to Montreal, and spends a number of weeks at the residence of Judge Van Ness, now known as Lindenwald, home of the late Martin Van Buren. We next see him at Baltimore and Washington cities far removed from New

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York in those primitive times when our travel- ler "spent three days on the road and one night in a log-house." In 1813 we find him editor of the Analectic Magazine in Philadelphia. In 1814, during our second war with Great Britain we see him secretary of Governor Tompkins, with the rank of colonel, bearing despatches through the western wilderness to Sackett's Harbor on Lake Ontario. At the close of the war we see him in his brother's counting-house in Liverpool. The following season he makes a pilgrimage through the Welsh Mountains, the central parj; of England, and the Highlands of Scotland. The next season we find him harassed with business, until the failure and bankruptcy of the firm swept away his broth- er's fortune and his own; and at the age of thirty-five Irving went up to London to com- mence life anew.

It seems as if the success of every man is in part the transcript of the same story that Gen- ius has less need of opportunity than adversity.

"That he that creeps from cradle on to grave, Unskilled save in the velvet course of fortune, Hath missed the discipline of noble hearts."

In this fifteen years of wandering by land and sea, this general study of human nature in every phase of life, we find a good capital and rich experience for the coming essayist. Add

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this to a fine classical education and a still finer course of reading from the English authors of the Elizabethan and Augustan periods, under the guidance of his brothers, all of whom had a taste for literature, and we have one side of the equation of Washington Irving's life. The question now is, What is he equal to, what can he do? The study and discipline of every young man find expression in the plain alge- braic symbols x x y unknown quantities in the un worked problem of life. Mere education may be furnished by teacher, parent, or guar- dian, or it may be acquired by the patience and perseverance of a youth like Elihu Burritt, who learns eighty languages at the forge, but the re- sult rests alone in the will and manhood of the individual; and it was this which supported Irving when he wandered almost penniless through the streets of London, and in the dark- est hour of adversity, when urged by his broth- ers and his old friend, Commodore Decatur, to come home and accept the first clerkship of the navy at a salary of $2400 a year, led him to re- ply, "I am determined not to return until I have sent some writings before me that shall make me return to the smiles rather than skulk back to the pity of my friends."

It was this faith in himself which published the first volume of the "Sketch Book" at his

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own expense when declined by the London publishers, the reception of which in Britain, France, and Germany sileatly answered the standing sneer of the English critic, " Who reads an American book?"

The following season, happy in his success, we find him in Paris writing" Bracebridge Hall," and launching his brother Peter in a steam- boat enterprise with a rashness worthy of Colo- nel Sellers in the "Gilded Age" of Mark Twain. CWe next see him at Leyden, Amsterdam, Frankfort, and Heidelburg, visiting the castles and ruins along the Rhine; then to Strasburg and through the Black Forest to the upper waters of the Danube. On his way to Munich and Vienna, he visits the battlefield of Blen- heim; then through Moravia and Bohemia to Dresden, where he remains six months tossed about, as he expresses it, on the stream of so- ciety} then through the Hartz Mountains, to Paris, where he remains one year and writes the " Tales of a Traveller." On his return from London he makes an excursion through Orleans and the centre of Francelfo Madrid, where, in the midst of books and manuscripts, he works fourteen hours a day for ten months on the "History of Columbus, j

We next see him on his way through La Mancha and the desolate mountains of the

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Morenas, well known today through the illus- trations of Dore, and rounds out the year in Spain with an Oriental dream of ten weeks in the palace of the Alhambra. Diedrich Knick- erbocker in the romantic land of Cervantes, with a sovereignty as absolute as Sancho Pan- za's firmly established on the throne of Boab- dil!

But an appointment from President Jackson breaks the enchantment, and he repairs to London as Secretary of the American Legation. We see him at Oxford University receiving a de- gree of LL.D., almost overwhelmed by the ac- clamations of the students and cries of Ichabod Crane, Rip Van Winkle, Diedrich Knicker- bocker, and Geoffrey Crayon. We find him at Newstead Abbey, occupying Lord Byron's room by way of inspiration, breathing in as it were the very oxygen of poetry among the sur- viving oaks of Sherwood Forest. We see him travelling with Martin Van Buren, on a Christ- mas holiday, through England; and after seventeen years of absence he returns to his native country, the acknowledged pioneer of American literature, and, like him whose name he honored, "first in the hearts of his country- men."

At the solicitation of his friends, he receives a public banquet in his native city, presided

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over by Chancellor Kent, pronounced by Charles King, President of Columbia College, the most successful dinner ever given in the United States.

During the summer he visits the Catskill Mountains, and the White Mountains, a sec- tion abounding with stories that never reach the dignity of a legend. We see him on his "Tour of the Prairies" through Ohio to the banks of the Mississippi and the Missouri. (In 1855 he purchases ten acres of land two miles south of Tarry town, and the Wolfert Roost of old Jacob Van Tassel is transformed into the Sunnyside of Washington Irving. It seems strange that the old family device, "Flourishing in sun and shade," should be hap- pily abbreviated here in Sunnyside, and the three holly leaves given as a coat of arms to his warlike ancestor, William de Irwin, by Robert Bruce on the field of Bannockburn, should, after the lapse of five hundred years, find poetic association in the ivy that twines about the porch of his cottage, brought from the home of the minstrel, who has woven the stern history of Scotland with the flowers of poesy from Ab- bottsford, the land of his fathers, transplanted by Mrs. Renwick, the "Blued-eyed Lassie" of Robert Burns; and stranger still that this wan- derer of the family should associate this device

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with a real family shield or shelter, the only device of our broad land the American home and gather under his own roof his brother and sister.

Busy and happy in the development of his plans, he declines the office of mayor of the city of New York, and also the post of Secre- tary of the Navy in the Cabinet of Martin Van Buren. Two years later, urged by his friends and a personal letter of Daniel Webster, he ac- cepts the appointment of minister to Spain. He spends fours year at Madrid in the midst of revolution and insurrection; is summoned to London to assist in the settlement of the Or- egon claims; returns to Sunnyside, builds a new tower to the cottage, and recommences the "Life of Washington." He is now seventy years of age, but we find him on his old familiar trips to Baltimore and in the library of Wash- ington, looking up material for his history; for it was characteristic of the man, even to the close of his life, whatever he did to do it ac- curately and well.

He spends a portion of the following summer at Saratoga and Niagara, and his trip through the lakes calls up his first visit to the St. Law- rence and the memories of his early life. A letter written at this time to a niece in Paris shows the wonderful changes of fifty years,

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presenting a contrast almost as effective and dra- matic as the long absence of his sleeping hero. It seemed necessary and fitting for the travel- ler through many lands to come back again to this point of his early wandering in order to complete the cycle of his life. "One of the most interesting circumstances of my tour," he writes, "was the sojourn of a day at Odgens- burg. I had not been there since I visited it in 1803, when I was but twenty years of age. All the country then was a wilderness. We floated down the Black River in a scow; we toiled through forests in wagons drawn by oxen; we slept in hunters' cabins, and were once four-and-twenty hours without food. Well, here I was again after a lapse of fifty years. I found a populous city occupying both banks of the Oswegatchie, connected by bridges. It was the Ogdensburg of which a village plot had been planned at the time of our visits. I sought the old French fort where we had been quartered: not a trace of it was left. I sat under a tree on the site and looked round upon what I had known as a wilderness, now teeming with life, crowded with habitations. I walked to the point where I used to launch forth in a canoe with the daughters of Mr. Ogden and Mr. Hoffman. It was now a bus- tling landing-place for steamers. There were

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still some rocks where I used to sit of an even- ing and accompany with my flute one of the ladies who sang. I sat for a long time sum- moning recollections of by-gone days and of the happy beings by whom I was then sur- rounded. All had passed away! All were dead and gone! Of that young and joyous party I was the sole survivor. They had all lived quietly at home, out of the reach of mis- echance, yet had gone down to their graves, while I, who had been wandering about the world, exposed to all hazards by sea and land, was yet alive. I have often, in my shifting about the world, come upon the traces of former exis- tence, but I do not think anything has made a stronger impression upon me than this my second visit to the banks of the Oswegatchie." To come back again after the lapse of a cen- tury to the memory and traces of his early life seems indeed like the fulfilment of Tennyson's dream in the "Sleeping Beauty," and we won- der if the retrospect from this lone standpoint of three score years and ten fulfilled the dreams of the youth of twenty. Perhaps so! for it was the good fortune of Irving to realize his visions, and in this particular he stands alone in the field of letters. Unlike the most of us, his "castles in Spain" were of genuine marble, and he lived to walk beneath their turrets and

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to know the richness of his inheritance. On one of his last visits to London he was domiciled with a friend in a cloister of Westminster Ab- bey, and in one of his midnight reveries he writes to his sister: "How strange it seems to me that I should thus be nestled quietly in the very heart of the old pile that used to be the scene of my half-romantic, half-meditative haunts. It is like my sojourn in the halls of the Alhambra. Am I always to have my dreams turned into realities?"

Singularly enough, even Sunnyside itself is fore-shadowed in his "Legend of Sleepy Hol- low," written in his thirty-sixth year, and the reader of the "Sketch Book" will remember his reference, near the beginning of the essay, to a little valley near Tarrytown, one of the quiet- est places in the whole world; and he says, "If ever I should wish for a retreat whither I might steal from the world and its distractions and dream quietly away the remnant of a troubled life, I know of none more promising than this little valley." Twenty-three years afterward he writes to his brother from Spain: "I hope some day or other to sleep my last sleep in this favorite resort of my boyhood;" and when the long procession wound its way from Sunnyside through quiet Irvington and Tarrytown among scenes which had found new

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charm in Irving's life, across the old bridge draped with mourning, past the Dutch church with its hallowed memories of two hundred years, to the peaceful valley of Sleepy Hollow, it seemed not so much a mourning procession as a poetic pilgrimage as if his dreams were realized in his last sleep ; as if there were a kin- dred sympathy in the words "dust to dust," and that the land he had filled with his legends was only receiving him to his own. It was one of those warm November days which seem to belong to the Hudson Valley, as mild and gen- tle as the spring-time, and the broad river, every point of which is punctuated with ex- clamations of beauty, lay tranquil as the heart of the gentle writer, as if it, too, missed a friend and companion ; for

"They do not err Who say that when a poet dies

Mute Nature mourns her worshiper And celebrates his obsequies."

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