The roe or gazelle is the smallest animal of the antelope kind; it is only about two feet in height,
and not more than half the size of the fallow-deer. Its eyes are remarkably soft and expressive;
so that the people of those countries sometimes say of a beautiful woman, "She has the eyes of a
gazelle." Like the hart and hind, it is noted for its swiftness: so we read, in 1st Chronicles, 12 : 8,
of men who were "as swift as the roes upon the mountains." In 2d Samuel, 2 : 18, it is said,
"And Asahel was as light of foot as a wild roe;" and in the Song of Solomon, "The voice of my
beloved ! behold he cometh leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the hills: my beloved is
like a roe or a young hart."
The gazelle is often pursued in the chase; so Solomon says, "Deliver thyself as a roe from the
hand of the hunter." They go in very large companies, sometimes as many as two or three
thousand; and they are still found in great numbers on the hills of Judea, the land where our
Savior lived and died.
"The wild gazelle o'er Judah's hills
'Exulting, still may bound,
"And drink from all the living rills
"That gush on holy ground."
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