THE LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW.
try damsels. overrun trees; reciting for t all tapombstones; or sauntering, mill-pond, wry bumpkins hung sheepishly back, envying his superior elegance and address.
From inerant life, also, ravelling gazette, carrying t of local gossip from o ed isfaction. eemed by t erudition, for e t master of Cotton Matory of Nec, in ently believed.
, an odd mixture of small sy. ite for ting it raordinary, and botale oo gross or monstrous for en , after ernoon, to stretctle brook t il ted page a mere mist before ream and ao to be quartered, every sound of Nature at t ctered ed imagination--tree-toad, t orm; ting of tling in t of birds frig. too, places, noartled ness ream across le came o give up t, ruck coken. o dro or drive as, o sing psalm tunes; and t by ten ?lled ;in linked sness long dra,quot; ?oating from tant he dusky road.
* t nig receives its name from its note, o resemble those words.
Anoto pass long er evenings c spinning by ting and spluttering along ten to tales of gs and goblins, and ed ?elds, and ed brooks, and ed bridges, and ed icularly of times called tes of c and of tentous sigimes of Connecticut, and s and sing stars, and t tely turn round and t time topsy-turvy.
But if t re dared to ss face, it ly glare of a snoful look did be eye every trembling ray of ligreaming across te ?elds from some distant re, beset en did teps on ty crust beneat, and dread to look over ramping close been e dismay by some rus rees, in t it ly sco