966 GENERAL CONTENTS. 



Book I. Chap. Sea. Page. 



Campeche. With reflexions on the Treaty of 



VerfaUles,{\-]b2) ■ • • • — ~ 6. 339 



Conjedure on the Etymology of the name given 



to this Ifland — Of the towns founded here by 



the Spaniards — Their roads, and names of places II. I. — 343 

 General defcription of the Ifland— Soils, moun- — II. i. 349 



tains, rivers, woods, and climate . . and to 2. 363 



State of Population traced from the firfl: Englifli 



fettlement — Proportion of fencible flaves to free- 

 men — Comparative opulence of the different 



counties — Deficiency Law . . . — — 5« 375 



Further thoughts on the Deficiency Law ; Jl>- 



Jentees ; Priority Law ; Credit Laws ; LeJ/ors 



of Slaves . • • • — — 4- 3^5 



On the expediency of extending the Population 



and Settlement of this fme Ifland— Remarks on 



the Monopoly of Lands — ^it-Rent Laws — 



Means propofed for bringing unfettled Tra£ls 



into cultivation . . • • — — 5. 402 



Inconveniencies attendant on the want of People — 



Probable happy confequences of a more tho- 

 rough Population — Plan recommended with 



this view — Caufe of the inefficiency of the 



" Laws for introducing white Settlers," point- 

 ed out . . . . . — — 6. 411 

 State of Agriculture — Schemes fuggefled for the 



improvement of it — Computation of the ex- 



penccs attending the Settlement of a Sugar Plan- 

 tation — General rules for eftimating the value 



of Cane land, and Sugar eftatcs . — III. — 4 or 



Roads. Imperft£lion of thofe in Jamaica — The 



mofl: approved modes of confhuding them, as 



particularly applicable to that Ifland . — IV. i. aCa. 



JVheel-Ccirriages of Burthen. Their flirudurc 



confidered as moft applicable to the planter's 



ufc; with remarks on tradtion, friftion, highj 



5 low. 



