You have to know when you're at the top of your particular mountain, I guess. Maybe not the summit, but as high as you can go.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Never measure the height of a mountain until you have reached the top. Then you will see how low it was.
Whatever that means, however you got on that mountain, why not try to climb it? And do it in your own way.
When you reach the top, that's when the climb begins.
It's a heavy burden to look up at the mountain and want to start the climb.
Only if you have been in the deepest valley, can you ever know how magnificent it is to be on the highest mountain.
Your attitude, not your aptitude, will determine your altitude.
I've realised that at the top of the mountain, there's another mountain.
One may walk over the highest mountain one step at a time.
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.
The top of one mountain is always the bottom of another.