Morris List of Books and Papers. 9 



Report (for tbe Royal Comraission), on tlie various Fruits and Fruit - 

 products at the Colouial and Indian Exhibition, 1886, p. 129 — 146. London: 

 Clowes & Son, 1887. 



The Dispersion of Seeds and Plants. Nature, Yol. XXXV p. 155 

 et seq. (Contains reference to the Pimente Industry of Jamaica.) London: 

 MacmiUan & Co., 1887. 



Botanical Stations in the West Indies. Kew Bulletin, No. 6, June 

 1887. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1887. 



Annatto or Roucou; its History, Cultivation, and Preparation. Kew 

 Bulletin, No. 7, July 1887; and Kew Bulletin, No. 9, September 1887. 

 London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1887. 



On the Introduction of certain West Indian Food -plants to the East 

 Indies. Kew Bulletin, Nr. 8, 1887, August. London: 'Eyre & Spottis- 

 woode, 1887. 



The Dispersion of Seeds and Plants. Nature, Vol. XXXVII, p. 446 

 et seq. (Contains references to the introduction and distribution of the 

 Guango, Pifhecolobiiini Savimi, and other economic plants to Jamaica.) 

 London: Macmillan & Co., 1888. 



The Vegetable Resources of the West Indies. An address delivered 

 before the London Chamber of Commerce, 27tli March 1888. Mr. James 

 Anthony Froude in the chair. London, 1888. 



The Colony of the Leeward Islands. A paper read before the Royal 

 Colonial Institute, April 14, 1891. (Deals with the botanical resources of 

 the Leeward Islands and offers suggestions for the development of local In- 

 dustries.) Proceedings, Royal Colonial Institute, 1890 — 1891, p. 225 — 263. 



Botanical Enterprise in the West Indies. (An account of a Mission 

 undertaken at the request of the Secretary of State for the Colonies to the 

 West India Islands in 1890 — 1891, with particular reference to their plant 

 productions and the working of the Botanic Stations.) Kew Bulletin, May 

 and June 1891, p. 103—168. 



Comraercial Fibres: A summary of the Cantor Lectures delivered be- 

 fore the Societj^ for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Com- 

 merce, March 15, 25, and April 1, 1895; on Fibres, their history and 

 origin, with special reference to the Fibre Industries of the West Indies 

 and other of Her Majesty's Colonial Possessions, 42 p. London, 1895. 



The Cultivation of Fruit and Vegetables for an Export Trade in the 

 Bahamas, being the substance of a series of lectures delivered at Nassau, 

 N. P., in 1895 — 1896. Nassau: Government Printing Office, 1896. 



The Sisal Industry of the Bahamas, an account of a white -rope 

 fibre industry established in this and other AVest Indian Colonies. A paper 

 read before the Society of Arts, March 18, 1896, General Sir Henry Norman, 

 G. C. B., G. C. M. G., d.E., in the chair. Journal of the Societ}'' of Arts, 

 March 20, 1896; see also Colonial Reports, Miscellaneous, No. 5, Bahamas, 

 1896. (The author received the award of the Silver Medal of the Society 

 of Arts' for this paper.) 



The Further Development of Agricultural Industries in Jamaica. A 

 paper read before the Jamaica Agricultural Society, April 5, 1897, Sir Henry 

 A, Blake, K. C. M. G. , in the chair. Journal of the Jamaica Agricultural 

 Society, 1897, p. 139—146. Kingston, Jamaica, 1897. 



