Hills
landform that extends above the surrounding terrain in lower mountain ranges, smaller than a mountain
(Redirected from Hill)
Hills are landforms that extend above the surrounding terrain, in a limited area. This page is for quotes making reference to hills.
Quotes
edit- The gods of the valley are not the gods of the hills, and you shall understand it.
- Ethan Allen, in reply to the King's attorney-general, in a New York court case decided against him, prior to his armed resistance to claims of New York authority over Vermont; quoted in Curiosities of Human Nature (1844) by Samuel Griswold Goodrich, p. 145.
- A hill is a transitional accommodation to stress, and ego may be a similar accommodation.
- Joan Didion, The Year of Magical Thinking, p 220.
- Run to the hills, run for your lives.
- There is a sacred horror about everything grand. It is easy to admire mediocrity and hills; but whatever is too lofty, a genius as well as a mountain, an assembly as well as a masterpiece, seen too near, is appalling.
- Victor Hugo, Ninety-Three (1879) Pt. 2, Bk. 3, Ch. 1.
- In the late 1800s, Europe had a peaceable bull’s-eye in the northern industrialized countries (Great Britain, France, Germany, Denmark, and the Low Countries), bordered by slightly stroppier Ireland, Austria-Hungary, and Finland, surrounded in turn by still more violent Spain, Italy, Greece, and the Slavic countries. Today the peaceable center has swelled to encompass all of Western and Central Europe, but a gradient of lawlessness extending to Eastern Europe and the mountainous Balkans is still visible. There are gradients within each of these countries as well: the hinterlands and mountains remained violent long after the urbanized and densely farmed centers had calmed down. Clan warfare was endemic to the Scottish highlands until the 18th century, and to Sardinia, Sicily, Montenegro, and other parts of the Balkans until the 20th. It’s no coincidence that the two blood-soaked classics with which I began this book—the Hebrew Bible and the Homeric poems—came from peoples that lived in rugged hills and valleys.
- Steven Pinker, The Better Angels of Our Nature (2012)
- I have discovered the secret that after climbing a great hill, one only finds that there are many more hills to climb. I have taken a moment here to rest, to steal a view of the glorious vista that surrounds me, to look back on the distance I have come. But I can rest only for a moment, for with freedom comes responsibilities, and I dare not linger, for my long walk is not yet ended.
- Nelson Mandela, in Long Walk to Freedom (1995).
- On a level plain, simple mounds look like hills; and the insipid flatness of our present bourgeoisie is to be measured by the altitude of its great intellects.
- Karl Marx, Das Kapital (1867) Vol. I, Ch. 16, as translated by Ben Fowkes.
- I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help. My help cometh from the LORD, which made heaven and earth.
- An architect should live as little in cities as a painter. Send him to our hills, and let him study there what nature understands by a buttress, and what by a dome. There was something in the old power of architecture, which it had from the recluse more than from the citizen.
- John Ruskin, The Seven Lamps of Architecture (1880), Ch. 3 : The Lamp of Power.
- You know you're over the hill when the hill is over you.
- Jacob M. Appel, Millard Salter's Last Day (2017)