He was to the British what Jerry Lewis is to the
French--much to the amusement of The Nation.
New York
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People Archive
Has The Nation ever had a more unlikely
correspondent?
Nothing can well be odder than the attention paid in England to "Buffalo Bill," or, as he is there known, "Colonel the Hon. William F.
Cody." He is literally the great lion of the season in London. He is an
honored guest at the fashionable parties, invited out to dinner
everywhere, and passes a good deal of his time in the company of royal
personages. In fact, he has had a far more flattering reception than any
foreigner without official rank or antecedents to help him. Garibaldi
was much less favorably received; although be was, when he went to
England, one of the most famous and romantic heroes of the day. Cody's
social success, like that of Fred Archer the jockey, marks the enormous
space which pure amusement now occupies in the life of the well-to-do
classes in England. The number of people who follow amusement as a
business has probably increased tenfold during the last forty years, and
the place of people who furnish amusement has been correspondingly
exalted. Americans of any grade or species who can do this are
especially successful in London society. Their stories, their jokes,
their songs, their new card tricks, their skill in poker and euchre,
sometimes supply the place, in giving them social consideration, of
nearly everything else which makes a human being respectable. We by no
means wish to underrate Buffalo Bill's character or capacity in his line,
but it seems very odd to see the highest circles of a civilized nation
paying to the proprietor of an equestrian show all the honor it could
bestow, and far more than the honor it would bestow, on a great author,
or inventor, or statesman. A large number of those who are fêting
Buffalo Bill are, in fact, taking pains to inflict slights and insults on
Mr. Gladstone whenever they get an opportunity.
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