American literature began with the horse. Our poetry had to wait for Whitman, but the stirrings of an American fiction—a fiction that did not slavishly imitate whatever the British were doing—are found in the ride of the Headless Horseman. Like Frost a hundred years later, Washington Irving had to go to England to write his most original work, and he came bearing news from the backwaters. The British loved tales of empire, loved them long after the empire had collapsed, and the better when written by exotics. Irving was followed by Kipling, Frost, Walcott, Naipaul, and Rushdie.
Perhaps a national literature must begin in myth. “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” gave nightmares to generations of children. Irving offered not merely German folk tales transplanted to the New World, but also a sense of the uncanny lurking on foreign ground (home and yet not home with its New York, New Jersey, New London), the uncanny found in the more stiff-collared, psychological version of Hawthorne a couple of decades later. Like Cooper, that other mythographer of the American East, Irving contributed more to the American matter than to the American style; his humor was so drily secondhand, so calcified and genteel, it had an almost anonymous character. A sentence will serve:
In this by-place of nature there abode, in a remote period of American history, that is to say, some thirty years since, a worthy wight of the name of Ichabod Crane, who sojourned, or, as he expressed