1890.] ^5 [Merrick. 



crowded with evidences of his incessant participation in dehate. Other 

 articles and works are upon questions of ethics, religion, history, ethnol- 

 ogy* philology, politics, science, statesmanship, etc., hesides numerous 

 addresses before Church congresses, college alumni, and discussions of 

 questions relating to the polity and services of the Church, and, in addi- 

 tion to all these, a great body of sermons. 



Dr. Goodwin suffered greatly at times, during the latter part of his life, 

 from insomnia. From this, however, he measurably recovered, and his 

 death, after a brief attack of partial paralysis, came most unexpectedly. 

 On the fifteenth day of March, 1890, he passed away, leaving a gap 

 which, in society and in the Church, cannot soon be filled, and an 

 enduring and grateful memory in the community, for his eminent services 

 in the cause of religion, and good learning. His epitaph may fitly be 

 written in words of his own choice : 



"A servant of Jesus Christ, and for Him a teacher of men." 



He was laid to rest in Woodlands Cemetery by the side of his beloved 

 wife, whose death a few years earlier had closed upon earth a companion- 

 ship which had endured for forty-six years ; and was followed to the 

 grave by the Bishop of the Diocese and a large body of his fellow-clergy, 

 as well as by a multitude of friends and others distinguished in every 

 walk in life. The resolutions of affectionate regard which were adopted 

 by the former, are appended, together with those of the Standing Commit- 

 tee of Pennsylvania. , 



Besides his membership in the American Philosophical Society, to 

 which he was elected early in 1861, he was a member of the Historical 

 Societies of Maine and Pennsylvania, the American Academy of Arts and 

 Sciences, and the American Oriental Society ; and the first President of 

 the Society of Biblical Literature and Exegesis. 



Appendix A. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OP THE REV. D. R. GOODWIN, D.D., LL.D. 



1. "On the Nature and Effects of Emulation;" Am. Quart. Register, 



Aug., 1832 (see bound vols, of Register); pp. 7. 



2. "On the Worth and Care of the Soul ;" Abbott's Rel. Magazine, Dec, 



1833 ; pp. 4. ' 



3. "Review of Upham on the Will;" Biblical Repository, April, 1836; 



pp. 33. 



4. "On Radical Opinions;" Literary and Theol. Review, June, 1836 



(3 and 4 bound in a volume of pamphlets labelled "Theol. Review, 

 Vol. I"). 



5. "On Religious Ultraism ;" Literary and Theol. Review, March, 1836; 



pp. 10. 



PROC. AMER. PHILOS. SOC. XXVIII. 134. 2E. PRINTED JAN. 12, 1891. 



