About Ichabod
Crane, the school master,writes in "A Legend of Sleepy Hollow":
He was, in fact an odd mixture of small shrewdness and simple
credultiy. His appetite for the marvellous, and his powers of digesting it, were equally
extraordinary; and both had been increased by his residence in this spellbound region.
Ichabod Crane digests Cotton Mather's (a Puritan preacher)
"History of New England Witchcraft," a book in which he firmly and "most
potently" believes. He spends many hours reading Mather's work, and "fluttered by his
excited imagination" he believes that he is "struck with a witch's token" at
times. To drive away the evil spirits, he sings psalm tunes. Nevertheless, Crane still delights
in the supernatural, so he spends winter evening with the old Dutch wives who exchange tales of
ghosts and goblins around the fire. In turn, Ichabod entertains them with Mathers's reports on
witchcraft, as well as predicting what the sounds in the winter air portend.
However, daylight always put an end to any fears. That is, until Ichabod Crane meets
Katrina Van Tassel. When Ichabod vies for her attentions against Brom Van Brunt, "the hero
of the country round," his superstitions are the weapon his adversary uses against
him.
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