I died on that mountain, too. I left a part of myself up there.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Every time I've been on Everest, people have died, though not in any expedition I was part of.
I like being near the top of a mountain. One can't get lost here.
I've realised that at the top of the mountain, there's another mountain.
Whatever that means, however you got on that mountain, why not try to climb it? And do it in your own way.
There's a world out there, and you've got to look at both sides of the mountain in your lifetime.
After much prayerful consideration, I feel that I must say I have climbed my last political mountain.
I'm here in the mountains, in the foothills of the Catskills.
Mountains were once my big adventure but is is over since a long time; I still dream from the wonderful days sometimes, read also a few pages from a mountain book. But the thought of doing again active mountain climbing has faded.
I'm one of those people who always needs a mountain to climb. When I get up a mountain as far as I think I'm going to get, I try to find another mountain.
The principal or highest part of the mountain having changed its direction to east and west, I ascended it in such manner as to leave its most elevated ranges to the south and travelled north west over a very rough and broken country generally covered with snow.