A Quote by Dolly Parton

If we all climb together, we could climb the highest hill. — © Dolly Parton
If we all climb together, we could climb the highest hill.
I started very early, from five or six years old, to climb. To climb trees, to climb rocks everywhere I could. At some point, of course, I used a rope.
The Nose is a beautiful route. The best thing is that, in one day, you get to climb so much. You climb and climb and climb the whole day.
I used to climb mountains a lot; I decided to go to Pakistan to climb K2, the world's second-highest mountain. I didn't get quite to the top.
The path to God is rarely a steady climb upward. We climb, we fall back, and we climb higher again.
Not to climb the high places lonely, but to climb there all together, to rise en masse! This is the way!
You don't climb mountains without a team, you don't climb mountains without being fit, you don't climb mountains without being prepared and you don't climb mountains without balancing the risks and rewards. And you never climb a mountain on accident - it has to be intentional.
A climb-out fight is where you climb a building. You climb fire escapes. You climb to the top of the building. You fight on the roof, and you fight all the way down again.
You soon realize that the peak you've climbed was one of the lowest, that the mountain was part of a chain of mountains, that there are still so many, so many mountains to climb...And the more you climb, the more you want to climb - even though you're dead tired.
Chaos isn’t a pit. Chaos is a ladder. Many who try to climb it fail and never get to try again. The fall breaks them. And some are given a chance to climb, but they refuse. They cling to the realm, or the gods, or love. Illusions. Only the ladder is real. The climb is all there is.
Somewhere between the bottom of the climb and the summit is the answer to the mystery why we climb.
I may climb perhaps to no great heights, but I will climb alone.
It's a long climb up Fools' Hill.
I'd rather climb 14a and eat whatever I want than climb 14d and measure out my food.
My father, though, could run very much faster. It was impossible to compete with him on the grass. But it was astonishing how slow old people were. Some of them could not run up a hill and called it trying to climb stairs.
Shouldering your loneliness like a gun that you will not learn to aim, you stumble into this movie house then you climb, you climb into the frame.
The best word shakers were the ones who understood the true power of words. They were the ones who could climb the highest.
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