11 collocations for summits

While the Alpine summits glow, Let me dream that I am floating on the lake of long ago.

These mountains, piercing the blue sky With their eternal cones of ice, The torrents dashing from on high, O'er rock, and crag, and precipice, Change not, but still remain as ever, Unwasting, deathless, and sublime, And will remain while lightnings quiver, Or stars the hoary summits climb, Or rolls the thunder-chariot of eternal Time.

We ever hasten on to chase their shades, Which, godlike, at a distance far remote, On golden clouds, the mountain summits crown.

East and west of these summits an arbitrary line drawn southwards to the coast encloses with more or less exactitude the older Wessex.

East and west of these summits an arbitrary line drawn southwards to the coast encloses with more or less exactitude the older Wessex.

The splendour falls on castle walls And snowy summits old in story: The long light shakes across the lakes

The author of the present poem seems to have been a native of the Babylonian city of Eridu, and his horizon was bounded by the mountains of Susiania, over whose summits the storms raged from time to time.

The white houses, the white roads, the masses of fresh green foliage, chiefly acacias, the tall dark cypresses, the cool blue water of the Isonzo, the blue-grey mountains in the distance, and on their summits the sunshine on the snow, which is hardly distinguishable from the low-lying cloud banks in an otherwise cloudless sky.

Reared in the shadow of the Peaks of Otter, whose lofty summits tower in magnificent grandeur far above the wooded heights and billowy green hills of the surrounding country, it is little wonder that the subject of this sketch should have been early imbued with the spirit of poesy, and led to the cultivation of tastes and the selection of themes which the grand and picturesque in nature are apt to suggest.

From the length of time that the sun is above the horizon, the continued action of his rays, in those climates where they fall vertically, or nearly so, would be intolerable, if it was not for the high mountains, from whose snow-clad summits a perpetual breeze derives a refreshing coolness, and for the deep glens and recesses, in which most animals seek protection from his meridian beams.

The principal mountains visible from the land here were those already mentioned, between southeast and east, and a few summits a little west of north, but generally the north and northwest horizon about the St. John and the British boundary was comparatively level.

11 collocations for  summits