Washington Irving was born on April 3, 1783 in
Tarrytown, New York. His father was a
merchant and owned an import business.
Irving had literary influences early in his life. He was friends with Edgar Allen Poe,
Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Charles Dickens. Washington Irving had no formal
schooling. Instead, he taught himself by
reading as many books as possible.
Washington Irving had other interests than just
writing. Irving was an inventor. He invented ice drinks and the dumb
waiter. Irving was also an
entrepreneur. "Early in his life
Irving planned to follow his father's footsteps in the family
business." (p. 187)
Irving had many writings in his literary
career. His works include The
Sketchbook, A History of New York, The Devil and Tom Walker, and Rip Van
Winkle. Despite all of these well known
works, Irving never won any awards.
Irving's short stories are The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and The Devil and
Tom Walker.
The first semblance in The Legend of Sleepy
Hollow and The Devil and Tom Walker is that nature proves to be a problem to
the characters. In The Legend of Sleepy
Hollow, the hollow is the setting for fear in Icabod's tall tales. Irving reflected on the dark setting many
times in this story. "The swamp was
thickly grown with great gloomy pines and hemlocks." (Washington Irving.
p. 57) In The Devil and Tom Walker, the
setting is portrayed in the same dark manner.
It is the forest where Tom Walker meets the Devil.
Another similarity in both of the "short
stories" is that a supernatural figure is the terror of each story. The supernatural being in The Legend of
Sleepy Hollow is the Headless Horsemen.
To the people of Tarrytown, the story of the Headless Horsemen is that
he was a Hessian soldier that had his head shot off by a cannon ball. The soldier rides around at midnight looking
for his head. "He glided through
the night with a head upon his horn."
(Washington Irving. p.
123) The supernatural figure in The
Devil and Tom Walker is the Devil. The
Devil lives in the forest in the darkest spot.
In the times that this story was written, people referred to the Devil
as the "Black Man." The Devil
tried to get Tom to sifn his book and hand over his soul.
Another parallelism of The Devil and Tom Walker
and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is that main characters in each story fear
supernatural figures. In The Legend of
Sleepy Hollow Icabod is afraid of the Headless Horsemen. Icabod is always looking over his shoulder in
fear of the Hessian soldier. Icabod is
especially fearful at night in the forest.
Icabod would also scare himself by telling scary stories. "Icabod's fear grew from his own
tales." (Washington Irving,
p.47) In The Devil and Tom Walker, Tom
fears meeting the Devil in the woods.
The Devil tries to get Tom to give his soul to him but Tom battles his
fears and doesn't give in. Tom has heard
of the stories about the Devil and wanted to avoid him completely.
Both stories have similarities from the fear of
nature, having supernaturalism, or to the fear of the supernatural. Washington Irving uses nature to create the
feeling of fright in the Sleepy Hollow and to bring fear to Tom Walker. Irving also presents the supernatural in both
stories through the Headless Horseman and the Devil. The fear of the supernatural in both stores
is evident between the Devil and Tom Walker and Icabod and the Headless
Horsemen. Washington Irving was a
romantic writer who heavily relied on the supernatural. He also use a lot of nature in his
stories. Irving, who had no formal
schooling, relied on reading as a way of gaining knowledge. Reading many books in his life may have
influenced on of the most popular writers of all time.
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