50 
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
Dayy, (John, M.D.) The West Indies before and since 
Slave Emancipation. 8vo., London, 1854. pp. 293 — 
337. 
Notices of the physical structure, population, &c., of the 
Island. 
Day, (C. W.) Five Years’ Residence in the West Indies. 
8vo., London, 1852. 2 vols. vol. 1, pp. 168 — 335. 
• A lively account of the island and its population, occa- 
eionally rather caustic and not always to be relied on, but 
frequently very applicable. 
DeVerteull, (Louis Antoine Aime, M.D.) Trinidad : Its 
Geography, Natural Resources, Administration, Present 
Condition and Prospects. 8 vo., London, 1858. 
The most important and complete work yet published on 
the subjects named in the title, and although the statistics 
and some of the remarks are no longer applicable, the book 
is still the best source of information extant on Trinidad. 
The Appendices, by Drs. Leotaud and Court and Mr. Crii- 
ger, contain notices of the Mammalia, Birds, Reptiles, 
Fishes, and Plants of the Island. 
Fortune, (Carme T.) An Introduction to the Geography 
of Trinidad ; compiled on a perfectly easy plan. Lon- 
don, 12mo., 1861. 
. - t . ' 
A detailed elementary account of the geography of the 
Island intended for schools. 
Gamble, (W. H.) Trinidad, Historical and Descriptive. 
London, 8vo. 1866. pp. 120. 
Remarks on the History, Geography, People, Climate, 
&c., and on the Missions, &c., from a Baptist Missionary 
point of view. 
