[In Africa by John T. McCutcheon]@TWC D-Link book
In Africa

CHAPTER XV
7/20

For instance, there's the oribi and the dik-dik, to say nothing of the steinbuck and the klipspringer.

The last named is a rock-jumping antelope, the others little grass antelopes, and all of them are as pretty and cute as animals can be.

They are all small, the dik-dik being scarcely larger than a rabbit, and they are divided into as many subspecies as the duiker.

A list of the different kinds of oribi would take up several lines of valuable space without conveying any illuminating intelligence to the lay mind.
We found thousands of oribi on the Guas Ngishu Plateau.

You couldn't go half a mile in any direction without stirring up large family parties of them, and a landscape looked lonely unless one could see a few oribi bounding over the ant-hills or rising and falling as they leaped through the grass.


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