Part, Chapter
1 I, II | its success; and French agents, making Canada their headquarters,
2 I, II | interests were at stake. Its agents imposed on their own employés,
3 I, II | understand, madam, how the agents of the Company, having lost
4 I, III | recommendation to the principal agents of the Hudson’s Bay Company.
5 I, IV | native land, and when the agents and soldiers of rival associations
6 I, IV | himself at the fort, the agents of the Company give him
7 I, VII | there are some few thousand agents or soldiers of the different
8 I, VII | Company risk its capital and agents with any other hope than
9 I, VIII | you not meet any American agents on your journey up, Lieutenant?”~“
10 I, VIII | your guard.”~“Are these agents, then, highway robbers?”
11 I, X | for its discovery to the agents of the Hudson’s Bay Company.
12 I, X | America.”~“And what were the agents of the Hudson’s Bay Company
13 I, X | years afterwards, when some agents of the Company took up the
14 I, X | it appears to me that the agents of the Company, living as
15 I, X | Company his struggles with the agents of rival associations, and
16 I, XII | which have retained French agents or their descendants in
17 I, XII | their employ.”~“Are these agents then held in such high esteem?”
18 I, XII | supremacy in Canada, French agents always proved themselves
19 I, XVII | anxious to ascertain if the agents of the St Louis Fur Company
20 I, XXII | good stock of furs for the agents from Fort Reliance to take
21 I, XXII | He began to fear that the agents might lose their way, and
22 I, XXII | bringing no tidings.~Either the agents had never started, or they
23 I, XXII | that if by that time the agents had not arrived, a convoy
24 I, XXIII| It is the same with. the agents of the St Louis Fur Company;
25 II, II | novel situation in which the agents of the Company now found
26 II, XXIV | communicate with some English agents of the Hudson’s Bay Company.~
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