Page:The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley (Volume 2).djvu/152

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SWITZERLAND.




On passing the French barrier, a surprising difference may be observed between the opposite nations that inhabit either side. The Swiss cottages are much cleaner and neater, and the inhabitants exhibit the same contrast. The Swiss women wear a great deal of white linen, and their whole dress is always perfectly clean. This superior cleanliness is chiefly produced by the difference of religion: travellers in Germany remark the same contrast between the protestant and catholic towns, although they be but a few leagues separate.

The scenery of this day's journey was divine, exhibiting piny mountains, 19 Aug., 1814.barren rocks, and spots of verdure surpassing imagination. After descending for nearly a league between lofty rocks,[1] covered with pines, and interspersed with green glades, where the grass is short, and soft, and beautifully verdant, we arrived at the village of St. Sulpice.

  1. So in Shelley's edition and the first edition of the Essays &c. (1840); but Mrs. Shelley reads cliffs in later editions.