Pecos Bill ( ) is a fictional cowboy and folk hero in stories set during American Expansionism into the Southwest of Texas, New Mexico, Southern California, and Arizona. These narratives were invented as short stories by Tex O'Reilly in the early 20th century and are an example of American "fakelore". Pecos Bill was a late addition to the larger-than-life characters, such as Paul Bunyan or John Henry.
The origin story of the character depicts him as a feral child who was raised by a pack of Mearns coyote. Years later, his long-lost brother convinces Bill that he is not a real coyote. In some tales concerning his final fate, Pecos and his love interest Slue-Foot Sue supposedly end up on the Moon, apparently never to return. In the animated film adaptation Melody Time, Sue alone is stranded on the Moon. A disheartened Bill then leaves civilization to rejoin the coyotes, who Etiological myth in honor of Bill's sorrow for Sue.
"Pecos Bill" was also the nickname of Civil War general William Shafter, Arizona, prehistoric, aboriginal, pioneer, modern: the nation's ..., Volume 2 Google Books although this was before O'Reilly created the legend. Shafter was considered a hero in Texas, and even had some legendary poetry written about how tough he was. War-time echoes: patriotic poems, heroic and pathetic, humorous and ... Google Books
Before his prose debut, O'Reilly had already used the name Pecos Bill for bandit characters in short films on which he worked as both screenwriter and actor: West of the Rio Grande (1921), in which he portrayed Pecos Bill, and On the High Card (1921).
Between January and February of 1935, O'Reilly published Pecos Bill stories in Adventure Magazine.
According to legend, Pecos Bill is responsible for creating many landmarks. One landmark he is said to have created is the Gulf of Mexico. Apparently, there was a drought in Texas that was so horrible, that Pecos rushed to California and lassoed up a storm cloud and brought it to Texas. It rained so much that the Gulf of Mexico was created. Another story is of him creating the Rio Grande River. He and his horse got stranded in the desert and needed water. So Pecos grabbed a stick and dug the Rio Grande River. One other landmark that he is responsible for is the Painted Desert. He apparently started shooting at a tribe of Indigenous Americans, and as they ran away, the ritual paint they had on them came off and painted the desert.
He grew up to become a cowboy. Bill used a rattlesnake named Shake as a lasso and another snake as a little whip. His horse, Widow-Maker (also called Lightning), was so named because he was Texas's first and most notorious serial killer, leaving a trail of dead bodies clear across Texas (this is another version of how the Rio Grande was made). Dynamite was said to be his favorite food. It is also said Bill sometimes rode a cougar instead of a horse. On one of his adventures, Pecos Bill managed to lasso a tornado. It was also said that he once wrestled the Bear Lake Monster for several days until Bill finally defeated it.
Pecos Bill had a sweetheart named Slue-Foot Sue, who rode a giant catfish down the Rio Grande. He was fishing with the pack when he saw her. Shake, Widow-Maker, and Slue-Foot Sue are as idealized as Pecos Bill.
After a courtship in which, among other things, Pecos Bill shoots all the stars from the sky except for one which becomes the Lone Star, Bill proposes to Sue. She insists on riding Widow-Maker before, during or after the wedding (depending on variations in the story). Widow-Maker, jealous of no longer having Bill's undivided attention, bounces Sue off; she lands on her bustle and begins bouncing higher and higher. Bill catches her, but then gets pulled with her. The town folks assumed both Bill and Sue were bounced away to another place or both ended up on the Moon where they stayed and were never seen again.
In James Cloyd Bowman's version of the story, Sue eventually recovers from the bouncing, but is so traumatized by the experience she never speaks to Pecos Bill ever again.
In a few other versions, Bill attempts, but fails, to lasso her, because of an interference by Widow-Maker who did not want her on his back again (or for that matter didn't want her coming between his and Bill's friendship), and she eventually hits her head on the Moon. After she has been bouncing for days, Pecos Bill realizes that she would eventually starve to death, so he lassos her with Shake the rattlesnake and brings her back down to Earth. Widow-Maker, realizing that what he did to her was wrong, apologizes and is forgiven.
In other versions, Sue could not stop bouncing, and Bill could not stop her from bouncing either, so Bill had to shoot her to put her out of her misery. Though it is said that Bill was married many times, he never loved the others as much as Sue, and the other relationships did not work out.
In the story The Death of Pecos Bill, Pecos Bill is in a bar when a so-called city boy walks in with gator-skin shoes and a gator-skin suit, otherwise trying to present himself in the manner of an outlaw cowboy. Pecos Bill found it amusing and laughed himself to death outside.
In the Melody Time version, Bill was apparently responsible for the California Gold Rush and M.F. Stephenson's famous "There's gold in them thar hills" phrase. He knocked out the gold fillings of a gang of rustlers when they tried to steal his cow, scattering the fillings across the landscape. Bill also creates the Lone Star long before he meets Sue. Additionally, in this version Sue gets stranded on the Moon due to Widow-Maker's interference in preventing Bill from lassoing her, after which a disheartened Bill leaves civilization to rejoin the coyotes, who Etiological myth in honor of Bill's sorrow for Sue.
In the more popular versions, including many children's books, Bill and Sue reunite, and get married happily ever after.
In a school story book (leveled reader), Bill finds a tornado and lassos it, and then they reunite.
Between 1948 and 1951, Clint Harmon created his own version of Pecos Bill for Charlton Comics, appearing in titles such Tim McCoy and Cowboy Western Comics. In Nature Boy #4 (August 1956), was published a adaptation by Bob Powell.
In 1949, the Italian publishe Mondadori launched the comic series Pecos Bill, written by Guido Martina and illustrated by Raffaele Paparella, Antonio Canale, Pier Lorenzo De Vita, Roy D'Ami, Francesco Gamba, Gino d'Antonio and Dino Battaglia. After its conclusion in 1955,Franco Fossati, I grandi eroi del fumetto, Gramese, 1990, pp. 178–179 the series was re-proposed several times by other publishers in other series created by different authors: in 1956 the Alpe publishing house created a new series, Le nuove avventure di Pecos Bill, with a different interpretation of the character created by Cesare Solini and drawn by Pietro Gamba. In 1960 Mondadori revived the character by re-proposing the stories already presented in the Albi d'Oro series in the series Gli albi di Pecos Bill, and then sold it in 1962 to the publisher Fasani who continued publishing it for over three hundred issues of newly created stories until 1967, in 1978 the publisher Bianconi debuted a new version of the character created by Armando Bonato. In Italy the reprints of the stories have been re-proposed several times by various publishers over the years.
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