Last of the great scouts: the life story of Col. William F. Cody ("Buffalo Bill") as told by his sister, Helen Cody Wetmore | ||
PREFACE.
In presenting this volume to the public the writer has a twofold purpose. For a number of years there has been an increasing demand for an authentic biography of "Buffalo Bill,'' and in response, many books of varying value have been submitted; yet no one of them has borne the hall-mark of veracious history. Naturally, there were incidents in Colonel Cody's life--more especially in the earlier years--that could be given only by those with whom he had grown up from childhood. For many incidents of his later life I am indebted to his own and others' accounts. I desire to acknowledge obligation to General P. H. Sheridan, Colonel Inman, Colonel Ingraham, and my brother for valuable assistance furnished by Sheridan's Memoirs, "The Santa Fé Trail,'' "The Great Salt Lake Trail,'' "Buffalo Bill's Autobiography,'' and "Stories from the Life of Buffalo Bill.''
A second reason that prompted the writing of my brother's life-story is purely personal. The sobriquet of "Buffalo Bill'' has conveyed to many people an impression of his personality that is far removed from the facts. They have pictured in fancy a rough frontier character, without tenderness and true nobility. But in very truth has the poet sung:
The loving are the daring.''
The public knows my brother as boy Indian-slayer, a champion buffalo-hunter, a brave soldier, a daring scout,
Thus a part of my pleasant task has been to enable the public to see my brother through his sister's eyes--eyes that have seen truly if kindly. If I have been tempted into praise where simple narrative might to the reader seem all that was required, if I have seemed to exaggerate in any of my history's details, I may say that I am not conscious of having set down more than "a plain, unvarnished tale.'' Embarrassed with riches of fact, I have had no thought of fiction.
Last of the great scouts: the life story of Col. William F. Cody ("Buffalo Bill") as told by his sister, Helen Cody Wetmore | ||