SLEEPY HOLLOW
An Essay by WASHINGTON IRVING
Introduction by Henry Steiner
This edition was first published by Sleepy Hollow Publishing(TM), Copyright 1996.
Introduction
A few years ago, at a meeting of the Sleepy Hollow Society, I read some
selections from the work which follows. Many of those who attended were
interested in obtaining copies. Others, even those very familiar with the works
of Irving, were surprised that they had never heard of the piece, especially
since it deals specifically with the subject of Sleepy Hollow. Since this short
work rarely appears in modern collections of Irving's work, I felt it might be
useful to produce a small number of copies so that others could be introduced to
it.
"Sleepy Hollow" is a personal reminiscence, written by Washington Irving under
the pen name, Geoffrey Crayon. This article (not to be confused with "The
Legend of Sleepy Hollow" [1819]) first appeared in The Knickerbocker Magazine,
in May of 1839.
"Sleepy Hollow," marked by a casual tone and gentle irony, is clearly
autobiographical. There can be no doubt that the locale Irving describes is a
real fixture in time and place. It is an area Irving visited several times
during his youth. In those days the author had an opportunity to observe the
place closely. During his teenage excurations with his friend James K.
Paulding, Irving developed a special affection for the valley of the Pocantico
River—Sleepy Hollow.
Much of the piece focuses on the region as the youthful Irving first discovered
it—the quintessential, post-revolutionary, American place. He shows us Sleepy
Hollow as he witnessed it, still connected with its colonial past and Dutch
ways. A place living peacefully in agrarian seclusion, a decade or two after
the momentous conflict of the American Revolution. It is a society of common
folk, as yet untouched by the great wave of enterprise and change which is
beginning to sweep the infant nation.
Later Irving describes Sleepy Hollow after the passage of thirty years, a place
ready to put aside old ways and join in the main stream of American life. It is
a budding community seduced by new fashions and the lure of enterprise. At the
close of his narrative, Irving anticipates a time when change will have so
completely altered Sleepy Hollow that cramped historians will doubt that it once
existed at all.
Those of us who live in Sleepy Hollow are very fortunate. On any day we can
walk through the Hollow, throw a stone into the Pocantico, and visit the old
church which Irving describes so evocatively in this work. Enough of Sleepy
Hollow remains to transport us into the days of Irving's youthful experience.
Thus, we need not entertain the "petulance" of the "antiquarian." We are also
fortunate to have Irving's account of early days in the Hollow, for with it we
can begin to rediscover that famous early American place which has been somewhat
obscured by time.
Henry Steiner
Village Historian
Sleepy Hollow
Having pitched my tent, probably for the remainder of my days, in the
neighborhood of Sleepy Hollow, I am tempted to give some few particulars
concerning that spell-bound region; especially as it has risen to historic
importance, under the pen of my revered friend and master, the sage historian
of the New Netherlands. Besides, I find the very existence of the place has
been held in question by many; who, judging from its odd name, and from the odd
stories current among the vulgar concerning it, have rashly deemed the whole to
be a fanciful creation, like the Lubber Land of mariners. I must confess there
is some apparent cause for doubt, in consequence of the coloring given by the
worthy Diedrich, to his descriptions of the Hollow; who, in this instance, has
departed a little from his usually sober if not severe style; beguiled, very
probably, by his predilection for the haunts of his youth, and by a certain
lurking taint of romance, whenever any thing connected with the Dutch was to be
described. I shall endeavor to make up for this amiable error, on the part of
my venerable and venerated friend, by presenting the reader with a more
precise and statistical account of the Hollow; though I am not sure that I
shall not be prone to lapse, in the end, into the very error I am speaking of,
so potent is the witchery of the theme.
I believe it was the very peculiarity of the name, and the idea of something
mystic and dreamy connected with it, that first led me, in my boyish ramblings,
into Sleepy Hollow. The character of the valley seemed to answer to the name;
the slumber of past ages apparently reigned over it; it had not awakened to the
stir of improvement, which had put all the rest of the world in a bustle. Here
reigned good old long-forgotten fashions; the men were in homespun garbs,
evidently the product of their own farms, and the manufacture of their own
wives; the women were in primitive short gowns and petticoats, with the
venerable sun-bonnets of Holland origin. The lower part of the valley was cut
up into small farms, each consisting of a little meadow and corn-field; an
orchard of sprawling, gnarled apple trees, and a garden, where the rose, the
marigold, and the hollyhock were permitted to skirt the domains of the
capacious cabbage, the aspiring pea, and the portly pumpkin. Each had its
prolific little mansion, teeming with children; with an old hat nailed against
the wall for the house-keeping wren; a motherly hen, under a coop on the
grass-plot, clucking to keep around her a brood of vagrant chickens; a cool
stone well, with the moss-covered bucket suspended to the long balancing pole,
according to the antediluvian idea of hydraulics; and its spinning-wheel
humming within doors, the patriarchal music of home manufacture.
The Hollow at that time was inhabited by families which had existed there from
the earliest times, and which, by frequent intermarriage, had become so
interwoven, as to make a kind of natural commonwealth. As the families had
grown larger, the farms had grown smaller, every new generation requiring a new
subdivision, and few thinking of swarming from the native hive. In this way,
that happy golden mean had been produced, so much extolled by the poets, in
which there was no gold, and very little silver. One thing which doubtless
contributed to keep up this amiable mean, was a general repugnance to sordid
labor. The sage inhabitants of Sleepy Hollow had read in their Bible, which
was the only book they studied, that labor was originally inflicted upon man as
a punishment of sin; they regarded it, therefore, with pious abhorrence, and
never humiliated themselves to it, but in cases of extremity. There seemed, in
fact, to be a league and covenant against it, throughout the Hollow, as against
a common enemy. Was anyone compelled, by dire necessity, to repair his house,
mend his fences, build a barn, or get in a harvest, he considered it a great
evil, that entitled him to call in the assistance of his friends. He
accordingly proclaimed a "bee," or rustic gathering; whereupon all his
neighbors hurried to his aid, like faithful allies; attacked the task with the
desperate energy of lazy men, eager to overcome a job; and when it was
accomplished, fell to eating and drinking, fiddling and dancing, for very joy
that so great an amount of labor had been vanquished, with so little sweating
of the brow.
Yet let it not be supposed that this worthy community was without its periods
of arduous activity. Let but a flock of wild pigeons fly across the valley,
and all Sleepy Hollow was wide awake in an instant. The pigeon season had
arrived! Every gun and net was forthwith in requisition. The flail was thrown
down on the barn floor; the spade rusted in the garden; the plough stood idle
in the furrow; every one was to the hill side, and stubble-field, at day break,
to shoot or entrap the pigeons, in their periodical migrations.
So, likewise, let but the word be given that the shad were ascending the
Hudson, and the worthies of the Hollow were to be seen launched in boats upon
the river; setting great stakes, and stretching their nets, like gigantic
spider-webs, half across the stream, to the great annoyance of navigators.
Such are the wise provisions of Nature, by which she equalizes rural affairs.
A laggard at the plough is often extremely industrious with the fowling-piece
and fishing net; and whenever a man is an indifferent farmer, he is apt to be a
first-rate sportsman. For catching shad and wild pigeons, there were none
throughout the country to compare with the lads of Sleepy Hollow.
As I have observed, it was the dreamy nature of the name, that first beguiled
me, in the holiday rovings of boyhood, into this sequestered region. I
shunned, however, the populous parts of the Hollow, and sought its retired
haunts, far in the foldings of the hills, where the Pocantico "winds its wizard
stream," sometimes silently and darkly, through solemn woodlands; sometimes
sparkling between grassy borders, in fresh green meadows; sometimes stealing
along the feet of rugged heights, under the balancing sprays of beech and
chestnut trees. A thousand crystal springs, with which this neighborhood
abounds, sent down from the hill-sides their whimpering rills, as if to pay
tribute to the Pocantico. In this stream I first essayed my unskilful hand at
angling. I loved to loiter along it, with rod in hand, watching my float as it
whirled amid eddies, or drifted into dark holes, under twisted roots and sunken
logs, where the largest fish are apt to lurk. I delighted to follow it into
brown recesses of the woods; to throw by my fishing gear, and sit upon rocks
beneath towering oaks and clambering grapevines; bathe my feet in the cool
current, and listen to the summer breeze playing among the tree-tops. My
boyish fancy clothed all nature around me with ideal charms, and peopled it
with the fairy beings I had read of in poetry and fable. Here it was I gave
full scope to my incipient habit of day-dreaming, and to a certain propensity
to weave up and tint sober realities with my own whims and imaginings, which
has sometimes made life a little too much like an Arabian tale to me, and this
"working day world" rather like a region of romance.
The great gathering place of Sleepy Hollow, in those days, was the church. It
stood outside of the Hollow, near the great highway; on a green bank, shaded by
trees, with the Pocantico sweeping round it, and emptying itself into a
spacious mill-pond. At that time, the Sleepy Hollow church was the only place
of worship for a wide neighborhood. It was a venerable edifice, partly of
stone and partly of brick, the latter having been brought from Holland, in the
early days of the province, before the arts in the New Netherlands could aspire
to such a fabrication. On a stone above the porch, were inscribed the names of
the founders, Frederick Filipsen, a mighty patroon of the olden time, who
reigned over a wide extent of this neighborhood, and held his seat of power at
Yonkers; and his wife, Katrina Van Courtlandt, of the no less potent line of
the Van Courtlandts of Croton, who lorded it over a great part of the
Highlands.
The capacious pulpit, with its wide-spreading sounding board, were likewise
early importations from Holland; as also the communion-table, of massive form
and curious fabric. The same might be said of a weathercock, perched on top of
the belfry, and which was considered orthodox in all windy matters, until a
small pragmatical rival was set up, on the other end of the church, above the
chancel. This latter bore, and still bears, the initials of Frederick
Filipsen, and assumed great airs in consequence. The usual contradiction
ensued that always exists among church weather-cocks, which can never be
brought to agree as to the point from which the wind blows, having doubtless
acquired, from their position, the Christian propensity to schism and
controversy.
Behind the church, and sloping up a gentle acclivity, was its capacious
burying-ground, in which slept the earliest fathers of this rural neighborhood.
Here were tombstones of the rudest sculpture; on which were inscribed, in
Dutch, the names and virtues of many of the first settlers, with their
portraitures curiously carved in similitude of cherubs. Long rows of
grave-stones, side by side, of similar names, but various dates, showed that
generation after generation of the same families had followed each other, and
been garnered together in this last gathering place of kindred.
Let me speak of this quiet grave-yard with all due reverence. for I owe it
amends for the heedlessness of my boyish days. I blush to acknowledge the
thoughtless frolic with which, in company with other whipsters, I have sported
within its sacred bounds, during the intervals of worship; chasing butterflies,
plucking wild flowers, or vieing with each other who could leap over the
tallest tomb-stones; until checked by the stern voice of the sexton.
The congregation was, in those days, of a really rural character. City
fashions were as yet unknown, or unregarded, by the country people of the
neighborhood. Steam-boats had not as yet confounded town with country. A
weekly market-boat from Tarrytown, the "Farmers' Daughter," navigated by the
worthy Gabriel Requa, was the only communication between all these parts and
the metropolis. A rustic belle in those days considered a trip to the city in
much the same light as one of our modern fashionable ladies regards a visit to
Europe; an event that may possibly take place once in the course of a
life-time, but to be hoped for, rather than expected. Hence the array of the
congregation was chiefly after the primitive fashions existing in Sleepy
Hollow, or if, by chance, there was a departure from the Dutch sun-bonnet, or
the apparition of a bright gown of flowered calico, it caused quite a sensation
throughout the church. As the dominie generally preached by the hour, a bucket
of water was providently placed on a bench near the door, in summer, with a tin
cup beside it, for the solace of those who might be athirst, either from the
heat of the weather, or the drouth of the sermon.
Around the pulpit, and behind the communion-table, sat the elders of the
church, reverend, gray-headed, leathern-visaged men, whom I regarded with awe,
as so many apostles. They were stern in their sanctity, kept a vigilant eye
upon my giggling companions and myself, and shook a rebuking finger at any
boyish device to relieve the tediousness of compulsory devotion. Vain,
however, were all their efforts at vigilance. Scarcely had the preacher held
forth for half an hour, on one of his interminable sermons, than it seemed as
if the drowsy influence of Sleepy Hollow breathed into the place: one by one
the congregation sank into slumber; the sanctified elders leaned back in their
pews, spreading their handkerchiefs over their faces, as if to keep off flies;
while the locusts in the neighboring trees would spin out their sultry summer
notes, as if in imitation of the sleep-provoking tones of the dominie.
I have thus endeavored to give an idea of Sleepy Hollow and its church, as I
recollect them to have been in the days of my boyhood. It was in my stripling
days, when a few years had passed over my head, that I revisited them, in
company with the venerable Diedrich. I shall never forget the antiquarian
reverence with which that sage and excellent man contemplated the church. It
seemed as if all his pious enthusiasm for the ancient Dutch dynasty swelled
within his bosom at the sight. The tears stood in his eyes, as he regarded the
pulpit and the communion-table; even the very bricks that had come from the
mother country, seemed to touch a filial chord within his bosom. He almost
bowed in deference to the stone above the porch, containing the names of
Frederick Filipsen and Katrina Van Courtlandt, regarding it as the linking
together of those patronymic names, once so famous along the banks of the
Hudson; or rather as a key-stone, binding that mighty Dutch family connexion of
yore, one foot of which rested on Yonkers, and the other on the Croton. Nor
did he forbear to notice with admiration, the windy contest which had been
carried on, since time immemorial, and with real Dutch perseverance, between
the two weather-cocks; though I could easily perceive he coincided with the one
which had come from Holland.
Together we paced the ample church-yard. With deep veneration would he turn
down the weeds and branches that obscured the modest brown grave-stones, half
sunk in earth, on which were recorded, in Dutch, the names of the patriarchs of
ancient days, the Ackers, the Van Tassels, and the Van Warts. As we sat on one
of the tomb-stones, he recounted to me the exploits of many of these worthies;
and my heart smote me, when I heard of their great doings in days of yore, to
think how heedlessly I had once sported over their graves.
From the church, the venerable Diedrich proceeded in his researches up the
Hollow. The genius of the place seemed to hail its future historian. All
nature was alive with gratulation. The quail whistled a greeting from the
corn-field; the robin carolled a song of praise from the orchard; the
loquacious cat-bird flew from bush to bush, with restless wing, proclaiming his
approach in every variety of note, and anon would whisk about, and perk
inquisitively into his face, as if to get a knowledge of his physiognomy; the
wood-pecker, also, tapped a tattoo on the hollow apple-tree, and then peered
knowingly round the trunk, to see how the great Diedrich relished his
salutation; while the ground-squirrel scampered along the fence, and
occasionally whisked his tail over his head, by way of a huzza!
The worthy Diedrich pursued his researches in the valley with characteristic
devotion; entering familiarly into the various cottages, and gossipping with
the simple folk, in the style of their own simplicity. I confess my heart
yearned with admiration, to see so great a man, in his eager quest after
knowledge, humbly demeaning himself to curry favor with the humblest; sitting
patiently on a three-legged stool, patting the children, and taking a purring
grimalkin on his lap, while he conciliated the good will of the old Dutch
housewife, and drew from her long ghost stories, spun out to the humming
accompaniment of her wheel.
His greatest treasure of historic lore, however, was discovered in an old
goblin-looking mill, situated among rocks and water-falls, with clanking
wheels, and rushing streams, and all kinds of uncouth noises. A horse-shoe,
nailed to the door to keep off witches and evil spirits, showed that this mill
was subject to awful visitations. As we approached it, an old negro thrust his
head, all dabbled with flour, out of a hole above the water-wheel, and grinned,
and rolled his eyes, and looked like the very hobgoblin of the place. The
illustrious Diedrich fixed upon him, at once, as the very one to give him that
invaluable kind of information, never to be acquired from books. He beckoned
him from his nest, sat with him by the hour on a broken mill-stone, by the side
of the waterfall, heedless of the noise of the water, and the clatter of the
mill; and I verily believe it was to his conference with his African sage, and
the precious revelations of the good dame of the spinning wheel, that we are
indebted for the surprising though true history of Ichabod Crane and the
headless horseman, which has since astounded and edified the world.
But I have said enough of the good old times of my youthful days; let me speak
of the Hollow as I found it, after an absence of many years, when it was kindly
given me once more to revisit the haunts of my boyhood. It was a genial day,
as I approached that fated region. The warm sunshine was tempered by a slight
haze, so as to give a dreamy effect to the landscape. Not a breath of air
shook the foliage. The broad Tappan Sea was without a ripple, and the sloops,
with drooping sails, slept on its glassy bosom. Columns of smoke, from burning
brush-wood, rose lazily from the folds of the hills, on the opposite side of
the river, and slowly expanded in mid air. The distant lowing of a cow, or the
noontide crowing of a cock, coming faintly to the ear, seemed to illustrate,
rather than disturb, the drowsy quiet of the scene.
I entered the Hollow with a beating heart. Contrary to my apprehensions, I
found it but little changed. The march of intellect, which had made such rapid
strides along every river and highway, had not yet, apparently, turned down
into this favored valley. Perhaps the wizard spell of ancient days still
reigned over the place, binding up the faculties of the inhabitants in happy
contentment with things as they had been handed down to them from yore. There
were the same little farms and farm-houses, with their old hats for the
house-keeping wren; their stone wells, moss-covered buckets, and long balancing
poles. There were the same little rills, whimpering down to pay their tributes
to the Pocantico; while that wizard stream still kept on its course, as of old,
through solemn woodlands and fresh green meadows: nor were there wanting
joyous holiday boys, to loiter along its banks, as I had done; throw their
pin-hooks in the stream, or launch their mimic barks. I watched them with a
kind of melancholy pleasure, wondering whether they were under the same spell
of the fancy, that once rendered this valley a fairy land to me. Alas! alas!
to me every thing now stood revealed in its simple reality. The echoes no
longer answered with wizard tongues; the dream of youth was at an end; the
spell of Sleepy Hollow was broken!
I sought the ancient church, on the following Sunday. There is stood, on its
green bank, among the trees; the Pocantico swept by it in a deep dark stream,
where I had so often angled; there expanded the mill-pond, as of old, with the
cows under the willows on its margin, knee-deep in water, chewing the cud, and
lashing the flies from their sides with their tails. The hand of improvement,
however, had been busy with the venerable pile. The pulpit, fabricated in
Holland, had been superseded by one of modern construction, and the front of
the semi-Gothic edifice was decorated by a semi-Grecian portico. Fortunately,
the two weather-cocks remained undisturbed on their perches, at each end of the
church, and still kept up a diametrical opposition to each other, on all points
of windy doctrine.
On entering the church, the changes of time continued to be apparent. The
elders round the pulpit were men whom I had left in the gamesome frolic of
youth, but who had succeeded to the sanctity of station of which they once had
stood so much in awe. What most struck my eye, was the change in the female
part of the congregation. Instead of the primitive garbs of homespun
manufacture, and antique Dutch fashion, I beheld French sleeves, French capes,
and French collars, and a fearful fluttering of French ribbands. When the
service was ended, I sought the church-yard in which I had sported in my
unthinking days of boyhood. Several of the modest brown stones, on which were
recorded, in Dutch, the names and virtues of the patriarchs, had disappeared,
and had been succeeded by others of white marble, with urns, and wreaths, and
scraps of English tomb-stone poetry, marking the intrusion of taste, and
literature, and the English language, in this once unsophisticated Dutch
neighborhood.
As I was stumbling about among these silent yet eloquent memorials of the dead,
I came upon names familiar to me; of those who had paid the debt of nature
during the long interval of my absence. Some I remembered, my companions in
boyhood, who had sported with me on the very sod under which they were now
mouldering; others who in those days had been the flower of the yeomanry,
figuring in Sunday finery on the church green; others, the white-haired elders
of the sanctuary, once arrayed in awful sanctity around the pulpit, and ever
ready to rebuke the ill-timed mirth of the wanton stripling, who, now a man,
sobered by years, and schooled by vicissitudes, looked down pensively upon
their graves. "Our Fathers," thought I, "where are they! -- and the prophets,
can they live for ever!"
I was disturbed in my meditations, by the noise of a troop of idle urchins, who
came gambolling about the place where I had so often gambolled. They were
checked, as I and my playmates had often been, by the voice of the sexton, a
man staid in years and demeanor. I looked wistfully in his face; had I met him
any where else, I should probably have passed him by without remark; but here I
was alive to the traces of former times, and detected in the demure features of
this guardian of the sanctuary, the lurking lineaments of one of the very
playmates I have alluded to. We renewed our acquaintance. He sat down beside
me, on one of the tomb-stones over which we had leaped in our juvenile sports,
and we talked together about our boyish days, and held edifying discourse on
the instability of all sublunary things, as instanced in the scene around us.
He was rich in historic lore, as to the events of the last thirty years, and
the circumference of thirty miles, and from him I learned the appalling
revolution that was taking place throughout the neighborhood. All this I
clearly perceived he attributed to the boasted march of intellect, or rather to
the all-pervading influence of steam. He bewailed the times when the only
communication with town was by the weekly market-boat, the "Farmers' Daughter,"
which, under the pilotage of the worthy Gabriel Requa, braved the perils of the
Tappan Sea. Alas! Gabriel and the "Farmers' Daughter" slept in peace. Two
steam-boats now splashed and paddled up daily to the little rural port of
Tarrytown. The spirit of speculation and improvement had seized even upon that
once quiet and unambitious little dorp. The whole neighborhood was laid out
into town lots. Instead of the little tavern below the hill, where the farmers
used to loiter on market days, and indulge in cider and gingerbread, an
ambitious hotel, with cupola and verandahs, now crested the summit, among
churches built in the Grecian and Gothic styles, showing the great increase in
piety and polite taste in the neighborhood. As to Dutch dresses and
sun-bonnets, they were no longer tolerated, or even thought of; not a farmer's
daughter but now went to town for the fashions; nay, a city milliner had
recently set up in the village, who threatened to reform the heads of the whole
neighborhood.
I had heard enough! I thanked my old playmate for his intelligence, and
departed from the Sleepy Hollow church, with the sad conviction that I had
beheld the last lingerings of the good old Dutch times, in this once favored
region. If any thing were wanting to confirm this impression, it would be the
intelligence which has just reached me, that a bank is about to be established
in the aspiring little port just mentioned. The fate of the neighborhood is,
therefore, sealed. I see no hope of averting it. The golden mean is at an
end. The country is suddenly to be deluged with wealth. The late simple
farmers are to become bank directors, and drink claret and champagne; and their
wives and daughters to figure in French hats and feathers; for French wines and
French fashions commonly keep pace with paper money. How can I hope that even
Sleepy Hollow can escape the general inundation? In a little while, I fear the
slumber of ages will be at end; the strum of the piano will succeed to the hum
of the spinning wheel; the trill of the Italian opera to the nasal quaver of
Ichabod Crane; and the antiquarian visitor to the Hollow, in the petulance of
his disappointment, may pronounce all that I have recorded of that once favored
region, a fable.
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