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Dean Frederic William Farrar (Bombay, 7 August 1831 – Canterbury, 22 March 1903) was a senior-ranking cleric of the Church of England, schoolteacher and author. He was a pallbearer at the funeral of Charles Darwin in 1882.
Eric, or, Little by Little is a book by Frederic W. Farrar, first edition 1858.It was published by Adam & Charles Black, Edinburgh and London.The book deals with the descent into moral turpitude of a boy at a boarding school or English public school of that era.
Frederic William Farrar (Dean Farrar, 1831–1903), novelist and cleric Stewart Farrar (1916–2000), scriptwriter and novelist J.G. Farrell (1935–1979), novelist
Frederic William Farrar: Seekers after God [6] IV 1868 George Macdonald: England's Antiphon [7] V 1869 François Guizot: Saint Louis and Calvin, translation by Frances Martin [8] VI 1869 Catherine Winkworth: Christian Singers of Germany [9] VII 1869 George Frederick Maclear: Apostles of Mediæval Europe [10] VIII 1869 Thomas Hughes: Alfred the ...
What is of Faith as to Everlasting Punishment: In Reply to Dr. Farrar's Challenge in His "Eternal Hope", 1879 (1881), in the controversy over everlasting punishment on Eternal Hope (1878) by Frederic William Farrar [17] [18] Christus consolator (1883) was published after his death, edited by his godson and friend George Edward Jelf. [19]
1883 – William Henry Fremantle The World as the Subject of Redemption; 1884 – Frederick Temple The Relations between Religion and Science [23] 1885 – Frederic William Farrar The History of Interpretation; 1886 – Charles Bigg The Christian Platonists of Alexandria; 1887 – William Boyd Carpenter Permanent Elements of Religion
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The school features, thinly disguised, in the Victorian schoolboy book Eric, or, Little by Little by Dean Farrar who had himself been a boy at the school. Though the school name was changed to Bishop’s College, it is the central location, too, in the book 'The Zone' by Graham Hamer who was educated at King William's College in the 1960s.