John Gill's Exposition of the Whole Bible
Isaiah 34:7
And the unicorns shall come down with them,.... With the lambs, goats, and rams; that is, either the rhinoceros, as some, there being no such creature as the unicorn; or the buffaloes, as m others; these "shall fall", as the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions render it, they shall be slain, as well as the rest; meaning, that along with the common soldiers, and inferior officers, the general officers should fall; and so the Targum,
"and the mighty shall be slain with them.''
R. Abraham Seba says n he read in a certain book, that the word here should not be read ראמים, "unicorns", but רומיים, "the Romans shall come down", c.:
and the bullocks with the bulls: or, as the Targum,
"and the rulers with the princes''
the same with the kings, captains, and mighty men in Revelation 19:18:
and their land shall be soaked with blood, and their dust made fat with fatness; Or, "their land shall be inebriated" o, or made drunk, with blood; and the dust thereof thickened by it, and made clods of with it, as the parched earth is watered with a plentiful shower, and the dust laid with it: this is a just retaliation to the whore of Rome, who has been made drunk with the blood of the saints, and now blood shall be given her to drink, even her own, with which she shall be filled, and welter and wallow in the clods of it, Revelation 17:6.
m So Gussetius understands it of a larger sort of oxen, Comment. Ebr. p. 783. n Tzeror Hammor, fol. 47. 3. o ורותה "et inebriabitur", Pagninus, Montanus, Piscator.