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<title type="main">Untitled [Colonel Cody's exploits in the Old World]</title>
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<principal>Johnston, Jeremy</principal>
<principal>Christianson, Frank</principal>
<principal>Seefeldt, Douglas, 1964-</principal>
<sponsor>This project is supported in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Geraldine W. &amp; Robert J. Dellenback Foundation.</sponsor>
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<authority>William F. Cody Archive</authority>
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<addrLine>cdrh@unlnotes.unl.edu</addrLine>
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<title level="a" type="main">Untitled [Colonel Cody's exploits in the Old World]</title>
<title level="j">The Galignani's Messenger</title>
<pubPlace>Paris, France</pubPlace>
<date when="1890-03">March 1890</date>
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<term>Buffalo Bill's Wild West in Italy &amp; Spain</term>
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<p>When Americans read of Colonel Cody's exploits in the Old World, they must be reminded of the prophet without honour in his own country. Buffalo Bill's fellow-citizens in the United States have never taken him quite seriously, and New York society, even outside of the very exclusive Four Hundred, has never thrown open its drawing-rooms to the leader of the Wild West. Trans-atlantic editors are, therefore, naturally bewildered when they read cablegrams concerning Colonel Cody's European conquests. It must be admitted, however, that Americans in Europe grow as enthusiastic over the <rs xml:id="coach.deadwood">Deadwood coach</rs> <hi rend="italic">et al.</hi>, as Europeans themselves, and finally look upon the Colonel as one of the characters of the age. And no wonder; for a man who receives attentions from European Monarchs, Princes, Presidents and the Pope, may be considered to be a personage, at least while he is in foreign parts.</p>


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