The Life of Buffalo Bill by William F. Cody (reading an ebook .txt) ๐
Description
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.
Read free book ยซThe Life of Buffalo Bill by William F. Cody (reading an ebook .txt) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: William F. Cody
Read book online ยซThe Life of Buffalo Bill by William F. Cody (reading an ebook .txt) ๐ยป. Author - William F. Cody
In order to entirely avoid the roughs, the members of the company entered the theater through a private door from the hotel, as the two buildings joined each other. While I was standing at the door of the theater taking the tickets, the landlord of the hotel came rushing up and said that Wild Bill was having a fight with the roughs in the barroom. It seemed that Bill had not been able to resist the temptation of going to see what kind of a mob it was that wanted to test the pluck of the Buffalo Bill party; and just as he stepped into the room, one of the bruisers put his hand on his shoulder and said:
โHello, Buffalo Bill! we have been looking for you all day.โ
โMy name is not Buffalo Bill; you are mistaken in the man,โ was the reply.
โYou are a liar!โ said the bruiser.
Bill instantly knocked him down, and then seizing a chair he laid out four or five of the crowd on the floor, and drove the rest out of the room. All this was done in a minute or two, and by the time I got downstairs, Bill was coming out of the barroom, whistling a lively tune.
โWell!โ said he, โI have been interviewing that party who wanted to clean us out.โ
โI thought you promised to come into the Opera House by the private entrance?โ
โI did try to follow that trail, but I got lost among the canyons, and then I ran in among the hostiles,โ said he; โbut it is all right now. They wonโt bother us any more. I guess those fellows have found us.โ And sure enough they had. We heard no more of them after that.
Another incident occurred, one night, at Portland, Maine. Bill found it impossible to go to sleep at the hotel on account of the continued talking of some parties who were engaged in a game of cards in an adjoining room. He called to them several times to make less noise, but they paid little or no attention to him. He finally got up and went to the room with the intention of cleaning out the whole crowd. He knocked and was admitted; greatly to his surprise, he found the party to be some merchants of the city, whom he had met the previous day. They were playing poker, and invited him to take a hand. Bill sat down at the table, and said that, inasmuch as they would not let him sleep, he wouldnโt mind playing for a while, provided they would post him a little in the game, for he didnโt know much about it. At first he didnโt play very well, intentionally making many blunders and asking numerous questions; but when morning came, he was about seven hundred dollars ahead. Bill put the money in his pocket, and just as he was leaving the room he advised them never to wake a man up and invite him to play poker.
Wild Bill remained with me until we reached Rochester. I met my family there, and having bought some property in that city, with the intention of making the place my home, I asked Bill not to cut up any of his capers, for I wanted the performance to go off smoothly, as I expected a large audience that evening. He, of course, promised to behave himself. When the curtain rose the house was crowded. The play proceeded finely until the Indian fight in the second act, when Bill amused himself by his old trick of singeing the legs of the โsupers.โ
After the curtain dropped, the โsupersโ complained to me about it. Billโs conduct made me angry, and I told him that he must either stop shooting the โsupers,โ or leave the company. He made no reply, but went to the dressing-room and changed his buckskin suit for his citizenโs dress, and during one of my scenes I looked down in front and saw him elbowing his way through the audience and out of the theater. When I had finished the scene, and had retired from the stage, the stage-carpenter came up and said:
โThat long-haired gentleman, who passed out a few minutes ago, requested me to tell you that you could go to thunder with your old show.โ
That was the last time that Wild Bill and I ever performed together on the stage. After the eveningโs entertainment I met him at the Osborn House. By this time he had recovered from his mad fit and was in as good humor as ever. He had made up his mind to leave for the West the next day. I endeavored to persuade him to remain with me till spring, and then we would go together; but it was of no use. I then paid him the money due him, and Jack and myself made him a present of $1,000 besides.
Bill went to New York the next day, intending to start west from there. Several days afterwards I learned that he had lost all his money in New York by playing faro; also that a theatrical manager had engaged him to play. A company was organized and started out, but as a โstarโ Wild Bill was not a success; the further he went the poorer he got. This didnโt suit Bill by any means,
Comments (0)