T H E RHjETIAN ALPS. 67
i
of their religion; yet the generality of them are not bigots, for they appear to efteera
indifcriminately all ftrangers who viiit thenij without attending to their different opinions
on religion : like moft mountaineers, they are particularly attached to their Prince and
to tlieir country.
IN fliort, whether we confider the inhabitants of this part of the world, or the coxmtry
itfelf, a traveller will not find it eafy perhaps to vifit any fpot where more circumftances
concur to gratify a love of natural hiftory, to enlarge the mind or to intcreft the
feelings.