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©ell f“loWef. 
[pyramidal.] 
A plant of the genus Campanula; so named from the shape of the 
corol or flower, which resembles a little hell. 
Gratitude. 
“Is no return due from a grateful breast ? 
I grow impatient, till I find some way, 
Great offices with greater to repay.” 
— Dryden. 
B EATITUDE, says Eev. E. W. Faber, “is so eloquent, so graceful, so 
persuasive a missioner. 
It is not only a virtue in ourselves, but it makes others good and 
virtuous also. 
It is a, blessedly humbling thing to be loved, a veritable abasement 
to be affectionately remembered by those about us, and gratitude makes 
our benefits look so little that we long to multiply and enlarge them, while 
it softens our hearts and takes from them all manner of little antipathies, 
mean jealousies, petty rivalries, cold suspicions. 
It is the sign of a vulgar man that he cannot bear to be under an 
obligation. 
A grateful man cannot be a bad man; and it were a sad thing, in¬ 
deed, if either in the practice or the esteem of this virtue, the heathen 
should surpass the disciples of that grateful Master, who, to the end of 
time and in the busy pageant of Judgment, will remember and repay the 
cup of cold water given in His name.” 
Let us then have grateful hearts! 
Or, why should we not be grateful % 
