This is Christian Remling's answer. I am just adding this to   make it   more explicit
and underline what he wrote. Take the potential $V(x)$ to be zero on a countable collection of disjoint intervals
$I_j$, $j =1, 2, \ldots$ with $\lim_j |I_j| = 0$, and take $V$ postive and tending to infinity on the complement of these intervals. 
For  example, if we assume that  $\Sigma_j |I_j| < 1$ we could place all the intervals within
the interval $[1,2]$ and take $V(x) = x^2 +1 $ on the complement of the $I_j$.
The ```ground state for $I_j$'', which I will call $\psi_j$, and for which    Christian writes down a formula
when $I_j = (a,b)$,  is zero outside of $I_j$, vanishes on the endpoints of $I_j$, forms the positive
arc of a sine wave inside $I_j$,  has    maximum $\sqrt{2/| I_j|}$ occuring  at the midpoint of $I_j$, and
has $L_2$ norm equal to $1$.     Since the $|I_j| \to 0$ the maxima of these $\psi_j$ tend to $\infty$ with $j$.[![sketch of potential][1]][1]


  [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/sG4BG.png