American Short Story-1
American Short Story-1
American Short Story-1
‘The Legend of Sleepy Hollow’ opens with a note that it has been found among the papers of Diedrich
Knickerbocker. Irving uses this framing device, in which he is just presenting a narrative found within the papers of
someone else, to give his story a claim to legitimacy and historical value.
At the beginning of the story, we learn from Diedrich Knickerbocker that it took place ‘in a remote period of
American history, that is to say, some thirty years since’. A classic example of Irving’s irony and humor with its
description of 30 years ago as a ‘remote period’, this quotation nonetheless underlines a real problem for early
American storytellers, who lacked a long, distinguished American history.
A major theme present in the story is the presence of supernatural. The entire town of Sleepy Hollow is said to be
bewitched by various ghosts and spirits. The witching influence is portrayed as mysterious and even primordial,
contributing the setting a greater sense of natural history.
Another major theme of the story is greed. Ichabod, for example, is initially attracted to Katrina because of the
abundance of her father’s farm. His appetite goes beyond by extending to the realm of ghosts, which he ‘swallows’
eagerly, but then because he has consumed so much, he becomes terrified by them on the return home.
Ultimately, Irving’s description of Ichabod’s greed and appetite can be situated within a broader social
context. In the early post-revolutionary United States, much of the country still remained to be explored. The nation
still seemed to be a vast amount of treasure of natural resources and abundance only waiting to be consumed. Irving’s
depiction of Ichabod serves as an implied rebuke to this kind of thinking.