6. wild asses--They repair to "the high places" most exposed to the
winds, which they "snuff in" to relieve their thirst.
dragons--jackals [HENDERSON].
eyes--which are usually most keen in detecting grass or water from
the "heights," so much so that the traveller guesses from their presence
that there must be herbage and water near; but now "their eyes fail."
Rather the reference is to the great boas and python serpents which
raise a large portion of their body up in a vertical column ten or
twelve feet high, to survey the neighborhood above the surrounding
bushes, while with open jaws they drink in the air. These giant serpents
originated the widely spread notions which typified the deluge and all
destructive agents under the form of a dragon or monster serpent; hence,
the dragon temples always near water, in Asia, Africa, and Britain; for
example, at Abury, in Wiltshire; a symbol of the ark is often associated
with the dragon as the preserver from the waters [KITTO,
Biblical Cyclopædia].
JFB.
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