The Life of Buffalo Bill by William F. Cody (reading an ebook .txt) ๐
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The popular history of William Frederick โBuffalo Billโ Cody remains more myth than anything else, yet itโs undeniable that he was a central figure in the American Old West. Pony Express rider, stagecoach driver, trapper, soldier, bison hunter, scout, showmanโhis rรฉsumรฉ reads like the quintessential record of all that makes up the Old West mythology, and itโs all documented in this, his original 1879 autobiography.
While The Life of Buffalo Bill is rife with the dramatic stylings of the dime novels and stage melodramas so popular at the time, in it Cody presents his version of his life: from his boyhood settling in the newly-opened Kansas territory, to his early life as a frontiersman. It was written when Cody was only thirty-three years old, just after he started his career as a showman and a few years before he created his world famous Buffalo Billโs Wild West show. Originally titled The Life of Hon. William F. Cody Known as Buffalo Bill the Famous Hunter, Scout, and Guide: An Autobiography, it is an arguably more accurate account of both his life and the American West than the later 1917 autobiography The Great West That Was: โBuffalo Billโsโ Life Story which was ghostwritten by James Montague and published after his death. Although it makes many claims that are disputed today, The Life of Buffalo Bill reveals much about both the historical William F. Cody and the Buffalo Bill of American legend, and gives insight into the history of the American West.
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- Author: William F. Cody
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As the warm days of summer approached I longed for the cool air of the mountains; and to the mountains I determined to go. After engaging a man to take care of the farm, I proceeded to Leavenworth and there met my old wagon master and friend, Lewis Simpson, who was fitting out a train at Atchison and loading it with supplies for the Overland Stage Company, of which Mr. Russell, my old employer, was one of the proprietors. Simpson was going with this train to Fort Laramie and points further west.
โCome along with me, Billy,โ said he, โIโll give you a good layout. I want you with me.โ
โI donโt know that I would like to go as far west as that again,โ replied I, โbut I do want to ride the pony express once more; thereโs some life in that.โ
โYes, thatโs so; but it will soon shake the life out of you,โ said he. โHowever, if thatโs what youโve got your mind set on, you had better come to Atchison with me and see Mr. Russell, who Iโm pretty certain, will give you a situation.โ
I replied that I would do that. I then went home and informed mother of my intention, and as her health was very poor I had great difficulty in obtaining her consent. I finally convinced her that as I was of no use on the farm, it would be better and more profitable for me to return to the plains. So after giving her all the money I had earned by trapping, I bade her goodbye and set out for Atchison.
I met Mr. Russell there and asked him for employment as a pony express-rider; he gave me a letter to Mr. Slade, who was then the stage agent for the division extending from Julesburg to Rocky Ridge. Slade had his headquarters at Horseshoe Station, thirty-six miles west of Fort Laramie and I made the trip thither in company with Simpson and his train.
Almost the very first person I saw after dismounting from my horse was Slade. I walked up to him and presented Mr. Russellโs letter, which he hastily opened and read. With a sweeping glance of his eye he took my measure from head to foot, and then said:
โMy boy, you are too young for a pony express-rider. It takes men for that business.โ
โI rode two months last year on Bill Trotterโs division, sir, and filled the bill then; and I think I am better able to ride now,โ said I.
โWhat! are you the boy that was riding there, and was called the youngest rider on the road?โ
โI am the same boy,โ I replied, confident that everything was now all right for me.
โI have heard of you before. You are a year or so older now, and I think you can stand it. Iโll give you a trial anyhow and if you weaken you can come back to Horseshoe Station and tend stock.โ
That ended our first interview. The next day he assigned me to duty on the road from Red Buttes on the North Platte, to the Three Crossings of the Sweetwaterโ โa distance of seventy-six milesโ โand I began riding at once. It was a long piece of road, but I was equal to the undertaking; and soon afterwards had an opportunity to exhibit my power of endurance as a pony express rider.
One day when I galloped into Three Crossings, my home station, I found that the rider who was expected to take the trip out on my arrival, had got into a drunken row the night before and had been killed; and that there was no one to fill his place. I did not hesitate for a moment to undertake an extra ride of eighty-five miles to Rocky Ridge, and I arrived at the latter place on time. I then turned back and rode to Red Buttes, my starting place, accomplishing on the round trip a distance of 322 miles.
Slade heard of this feat of mine, and one day
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