Washington Irving's stories have timeless appeal
By A.M.P. Meisel
For the Poughkeepsie Journal
The weighty, sweltering humidity of a hot summers evening gives
way to a brooding gathering storm. As the dark, ominous clouds begin
to push their way like slow giants over the Catskill Mountains, the
reverberating bass of distant thunder begins to grow in intensity.
A particularly loud clap from the heavens sends the nearby child running
to you in bewildered fear.
Softly, you calm the child by explaining that the noise was
merely a wonderful strike, for the jolly men in the heavens are
bowling again. And, thanks to Washington Irving, you can add a
bit of local lore and explain that it is actually renowned explorer
Hendrick Hudsons sailing crew playing ninepin in the mountains.
The value of a good story never diminishes, something Irving
knew quite well.
What gives Irvings stories timeless appeal is largely
the Hudson Valleys vivid backdrop. During his boyhood summers,
Irving, who was born in 1783, escaped the confines of New York
City for the green spaces of the Hudson Valley and became enchanted
with the region. He wrote, in The Sketch-Book,
that he rambled the countryside, making himself familiar with
all its places famous in history or fable and with
every spot where a murder or robbery had been committed,
or a ghost seen.
So transported was Irving by the Hudson Valley landscape that
he sought to capture in words what the Hudson River painters,
many of whom were his close friends, sought to capture in oil
on canvas. He began his writing career in the early 1800s and
is often considered the first American man of letters, known predominantly
for his writings in and about the Hudson Valley. But it is clearly
more than a local color charm that keeps
him alive. Irving helped forge the first impressions of an American
literary identity.
Helped create an identity
As, arguably, the Hudson Valleys writer of the millennium,
he has done what forklorists and mythmakers of John Henry, Paul
Bunyan or Pecos Bill have done for the country helped forge
a national, cultural identify rooted here, in the first growth
of the new world. Hudson Valley writer and State University of
New Paltz professor H.R. Stoneback said, Irving felt
profoundly especially after his travels in Europe
the lack of a layered, storied past in America. Of course, it
was the early 1800s. It was a new country with no deep sense of
the past, no deep sense of place, no legends, no lore, so he set
out to create a mythical past.
Part of Irvings mastery was that he localized German and
Dutch lore in American tales and legends. He flavored stories
like Rip Van Winkle with the myth of the
Manitou an American Indian woman who played tricks on hunters
in the Catskill Mountains. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
features the account of Revolutionary spy Major Andres tortured
ghost wandering Tarrytown.
The forefather of American Romanticism, Irving believed nature
had the power to inspire the imagination to an almost spiritual
realm.
For Irving, the Hudson Valley landscape defied the artifice that
the Romantics despised. The image of Rip working his way through
thickets of birch, sassafras, and witch-hazel
creates a picture of voluptuous dishevelment.
Perhaps Irving sought hardest to capture this abundance because
he sensed the encroachment of progress, namely in the form of
the railroad, which ran its tracks through his riverfront estate,
Sunnyside in Tarrytown, where he wrote The Sketch-book.
According to Sunnysides historical interpreter, Robert
Valentine, Irving once complained that if the Garden of Eden still
existed, they would find a way to run a railroad through it. The
Hudson Valley was his Eden railroad or no.
Take the character of Rip Van Winkle, who awakens from a 20-year
slumber, walks down from the pristine highlands that have remained
unravaged by time, and finds that in the village strange
names were over the doors strange faces at the windows
everything was strange.
Likewise, Irving depicted the Hudson Valley itself, as a sort
of sleeping giant who was just awakening from its youthful dreams.
He quotes John Miltons essay, On the Liberty
of the Press, to describe the moral and physical development
of America as a noble and puissant nation rousing
herself like a strong man after sleep.
The Hudson Valley was the proverbial land of opportunity
if one didnt sleep through it. Irving recognized the Hudson
Valleys fertile farmlands, its strategic business locations,
the divine splendor of its banks, its rich history. In the famous
opening of Rip Van Winkle, Irving stated,
Whoever has made a voyage up the Hudson must remember
the Kaatskill Mountains seen to the west of the river,
swelling up to a noble height, and lording it over the surrounding
country. Irving guaranteed that we would never forget.
Stoneback added, You know, he used to be called
the Father of American Literature in the old textbooks.
If he was the father, then the good earth of the Hudson Valley
and the Catskill Mountains was the Mother of American Literature
and Myth.
A.M.P. Meisel is a teacher in the Highland Central School
District and former adjunct instructor in writing composition
at SUNY New Paltz.
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