The Legend Of Sleepy Hollow

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Mr Crane I recently read the short story The Legend Of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving. After reading it I had many emotions, but one that stuck out was confusion about what really happened to Mr. Ichabod Crane. After a little bit of pondering, I was lead to my conclusion that Ichabod was knocked unconscious by the blow to his cranium, which convinced the rider, whoever it was to go away. Later on in the night Ichabod must've gotten up and out love the combination of being sorry for himself, fear, and embarrassment, just have gone away to a different town with nothing but his clothes. There are many points in this story which prove my theory, and i'm going to show you them. The first piece of evidence that the author laid out for me …show more content…

Those people probably think with the housewives. They think that Crane was “...Spirited away by supernatural matters.”(Irving,p.828). This way of thinking and statement are both very, very wrong. First of all, you should never believe old housewives tales. These tales usually have to do with supernatural superstitions, which are all wrong. For example, scientifically, if you step on a crack, then your mother's back will not magically break. That's the same thing with think that Crane was magically shipped away. Not possible. My second point is that if by any chance that they were right, then would the pumpkin be magical, and not change at all? Washington Irving Specifically states that the pumpkin “...a shattered pumpkin”. This means that there was no supernaturalistic stuff in this. My third point is that straight up, magic doesn't exist in real life, so he wouldn't have been magically shipped away. So much for the counterclaim, know let's go and look at my second to last piece of evidence. “The next morning the old horse was found without his saddle, and with the bridle under his feet, soberly cropping at the grass at his master's gate”(Irving,p.827). This quote proves that Mr. Crane had been knocked out for a while, because he obviously would have taken his horse, if the horse had been their. I believe that the horse left his master and ran back to the house, before Ichabod

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