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ness. I have heard him sometimes when I have thought him among the most cogent and eloquent speakers I ever listened to, and I have thought that with his great skill in bringing forward arguments in their best shape and order, his strength of appeal to the sense of responsibility, his clearness in presenting truth, he might have reached the highest eminence at the bar, if he had originally turned his talents in that direction.

To these powers he joined great rapidity in the movements of his mind, in devising plans and executing them. He was thus qualified to throw off work fast. And yet, to this was joined the seemingly inconsistent quality of unwearied painstaking. I have often wondered how such a man, so natively restless, and of so nervous a temperament, could endure the drudgery of drilling in speaking and composition, day after day, as he did while he was Professor of Rhetoric. It seemed as if, when he had once made up his mind that an end was desirable, the amount of toil to secure it became of no account. Or rather he was ardent without being impatient. He had an energy of will and of principle which kept him working till a thorough result could be effected.

The religious character of Dr. Goodrich will be remembered by his students and his fellow-citizens longer than any of his distinctive moral or intellectual traits, and by those who knew him longest will be remembered as a character that went on steadily improving in purity, zeal for doing good, and self-consecration. Some of the Christian traits which show most brightly in him deserve to be mentioned apart. And, first, he was a hopeful and joyful Christian. This was to be observed especially in the latter part of his life. I have heard him speak more than once in private of Christian joy, and that it might be reached and ought to be aimed at. His internal peace in his last years seemed to be disturbed by no serious doubts or fears. He looked out of himself at the great objects of Christian faith for consolation, and held the opinion that the tendency to search the heart and explore the motives which had been fostered by such books as Edwards's on the affections had been pushed too far, that gloomy self-distrustful

Christians had been made by it, who by this means were shorn of a part of their power. He was a man of prayer, who believed in its efficiency with God, and not merely in its reaction on the petitioner, a man who prayed "always with all prayer and supplication in the spirit, and watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all saints." All who knew him knew that he was a devout man, one who held constant intercourse with God, in public and private, in set seasons and in ejaculations, who prayed earnestly over his daily toils as well as over his spiritual interests, with whom the prosperity of religion was a constant subject of interest and of fervent desire. And this prayerfulness was associated with a living faith in a present Spirit, daily dwelling in the hearts of those who seek for him and guiding them in the ways of peace. He was a man of remarkable Christian munificence. We have already seen that he founded the professorship which he afterwards filled in the theological department by a very considerable donation. In the year 1853 he gave another considerable sum of money, to be employed as an accumulating fund for the uses of the same department; and in all the subscriptions made to Yale College, he was among the readiest and most liberal of its friends. In contributions to public objects, especially to the cause of missions, he was always foremost. Nor was there any means of doing good for which his purse was not opened. The wonder was sometimes expressed where a man by no means wealthy found the resources which he parted with so freely. But the explanation lay in his sagacity, thrift, and economy. The revenues from his copyrights and literary labors were managed and husbanded with skill, and were used as not his own but God's. The large sum given for a theological accumulating fund was the fruit of years of careful saving for this express purpose. And with this munificence a spirit of kindness and sympathy ran parallel, which was manifested in a thousand ways towards the poor, the sick, the afflicted, those who were struggling to obtain an education, those who in any way had fair claims upon his compassion. To the widow and the female left destitute by visitations of Providence he was a

bountiful and constant friend, and none will more warmly testify to his goodness than persons of this description. To his acquaintances in their afflictions he was the first and readiest of consolers, and the most prompt visitor in illness. It was not enough for him to contribute his money, but in cases of distress he invoked the aid of other benefactors; he found work for those who were out of employment; he spent his valuable time in counsel to those who sought it; he took the sick or the distressed into his house; in short, his activity in benevolence was as large as in the literary undertakings and the official employments which were the immediate business of his life.

I will only add, that he was always ready to converse on religious topics; not merely on theological opinions, or the meaning of scripture, or the operations of Christian benevolence, but on those spiritual truths which touch the heart, and on the inner life itself. He slid readily and willingly into these subjects. He showed that they were daily near and familiar. The reserve which is so habitual to many of the best men upon these deepest of subjects, had worn away from his mind; they were great realities, in his judgment to be dwelt upon and spoken of as much as any other.

In endeavoring thus to estimate the life and character of Dr. Goodrich, I am naturally brought back to those words which stood at the head of this discourse: "Not slothful in business; fervent in spirit; serving the Lord, (or seizing the opportunity;) rejoicing in hope; patient in tribulation; continuing instant in prayer; distributing to the necessities of saints; given to hospitality." Has not this whole discourse been an illustration of one or another of these practical Christian virtues; of untiring and sleepless industry and activity upon Christian principles; of ardor in doing good which took up God's cause as if it were his own; of a promptness and efficiency which had already planned and sometimes accomplished, while other men were thinking of setting out; of a radiant, trustful, hopeful piety; of prayerfulness in daily life; of a stream of charities and sympathies towards the servants and the cause of Christ, and those distressed ones whom Christ

made his own by pitying them? There is yet one of these pencil-touches of the Apostle, which I have not noticed"patient in tribulation." One son was taken away from him in childhood. Two bright-faced daughters graced his family, until they were given in marriage to young men of worth and promise. But in the very morning of their married life the mower's scythe cut them down in their new homes, and in the case of one of them without the father being near to see her die. This, though they died in hope, was tribulation, but it was tribulation patiently borne, and he surrendered submissively the gifts and the hopes which God had lent him.

To those survivors of his family whose turn has come to mourn for him, I need not attempt to act the part of a consoler which he has sustained towards me and towards so many. There is consolation, or rather joy, suggested by his life and his death. That he lived to that epoch of old age beyond which life begins to be labor and sorrow, and just there passed away by no painful death, that he had spent a life full of accomplishment and results, that he had walked with God in near and nearer intimacy, these things surely are what, if any thing, can take away sadness and gloom from death.

To the College, to its religious interests especially, his loss is exceedingly great, and as its oldest officer, I have felt it to be appropriate for me, once his pupil, then his colleague, and brought into near relations to him, to express on my own part, on that of my colleagues, and on that of the students, upon whom his hold was strong and close, our sense of the loss. Who shall fill the breach? What more earnest spirit of survivors, what new zeal of another and kindness like his own can perpetuate his influence? May God, who loves his own cause better than his servants love it, and has the resources of boundless wisdom, help where man fails.

ARTICLE IV.-HEBREW SERVITUDE.

ALL institutions are organic. They grow, and are the product of previous and present circumstances. At each period of their life, they embody the results of all their preceding history. Their character is like the flavor of fruit-depend ent on germ, soil, climate and culture; and in order fully to understand, and correctly to estimate an institution, we must know its history; we must know the charaeter of the original germ planted, the people among whom it grew to maturity, the religion, polity, and manners of that people, and the specific enactments pertaining to the particular institution under consideration. This is eminently true of slavery, not only because it has a history, but because, next to the domestic relations, the servile are the most intimate and influential. Next to the bond which unites husband and wife; which ties parent to child; the bond of bondage binds together the largest number of reciprocal influences. While, therefore, this intense reciprocity enables us to form a more correct estimate of the servile institutions found in each nation of past or present history, it becomes a fruitful source of error, in reasoning from the servile institution of one nation, to the servile institution of another. Slavery has been practiced by all the nations of the globe, but it would be very unsafe to infer that its character was as uniform as its prevalence has been universal. It would be as if a man should infer from the universality of marriage, that the practice in Eden corresponded with the practice in Utah: a mistake as vicious in logic as it would be pernicious in ethics. In discussing, therefore, the character of Hebrew servitude, we shall not seek for light or illustrations in the dark and heathen systems of Greece or Rome-full and accurate as is our knowledge of those systems;-neither shall we refer to American slavery, though it is a legally defined system and claims to be scriptural. For, save in the single abstract relation of servant and master, there is hardly a feature common to both-not

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