Farnaby was a leading classical scholar as well as the outstanding schoolmaster of his time. His works chiefly consisted of annotated editions of Latin authors
Juvenal,
Persius,
Seneca,
Martial,
Lucan,
Virgil,
Ovid and
Terence, which enjoyed great popularity. He is also the author of textbooks on rhetoric and Latin grammar. His editions of the classics, with elaborate Latin notes, were very popular throughout the seventeenth century. He edited Juvenal's and Persius's satires (Lond. 1612, dedicated to Henry, prince of Wales, 1620, 1633, 1685 tenth ed.); Seneca's tragedies (Lond. 1613, 1624, 1678 ninth ed., 1713, 1728); Martial's 'Epigrams' (Lond. 1615, Geneva, 1623, Lond. 1624, 1633, 1670, seventh ed.); Lucan's 'Pharsalia' (Lond. 1618, 1624, 1659, seventh ed.); Virgil's works (1634, dedicated to
William Craven, Earl of Craven of Hamsted, and 1661); Ovid's
Metamorphoses (Lond. 1637, 1650, 1677, 1739); Terence's comedies, ed. Farnaby and
Meric Casaubon (Amsterdam, 1651, 1669, 1686, 1728, Saumur, 1671). Farnaby's other works are: •
Index Rhetoricus Scholis et Institutioni tenerioris ætatis accommodatus, London, 1625; 2nd ed. 1633; 3rd ed. 1640; 4th ed. 1646; 15th ed. 1767; reissued in 1640 as
Index Rhetoricus et Oratoricus cum Formulis Oratoriis et Indice Poetico, and epitomised by T. Stephens in 1660 for Bury St. Edmunds school under the title
Tροποσκηματολογία. •
Phrases Oratoriæ elegantiores et poeticæ, London, 1628, 8th ed. •
Ἡ τῆς Ἀνθολογίας Ἀνθολογία, Florilegium Epigrammatum Græcorum eorumque Latino versu a variis redditorum, London, 1629, 1650, 1671. •
Systema Grammaticum, London, 1641; the authorised Latin grammar prepared by royal order. •
Phrasiologia Anglo-Latina, London, n.d. 6.
Tabulæ Græcæ Linguæ, London, n.d. •
Syntaxis, London, n.d. A patent dated 6 April 1632 granted Farnaby exclusive rights in all his books for twenty-one years, and on the back of the title-page of the 1633 edition of the
Index Rhetoricus penalties are threatened against any infringement of Farnaby's copyright. Letters from
G. J. Vossius to Farnaby appear in Vossius's
Epistolæ; and four of Farnaby's letters to Vossius are printed in Vossius's
Epistolæ Clarorum Virorum. Other letters appear in
John Borough's
Impetus Juveniles (1643), and in
Barten Holyday's
Juvenal. Farnaby prefixed verses in Greek with an English translation to
Thomas Coryat's
Crudities, and he wrote commendatory lines for
William Camden's
Annales. Ben Jonson was a friend of Farnaby, and contributed commendatory Latin elegiacs to his edition of
Juvenal and
Persius.
John Owen praises Farnaby's Seneca in his
Epigrams. He is highly commended in Dunbar's
Epigrammata, 1616, and in
Richard Bruch's
Epigrammatum Hecatontades duæ, 1627. ==Family==