Freind was a clergyman and successful headmaster. He published various English and Latin poems in collections in the late 1600s and 1730s. He was also a prolific author of Latin epigrams and monumental inscriptions, most notably that of Lord Carteret. Much of his work was dedicated to or about nobility.
Francis was a lukewarm clergyman, devoting himself more to developing a literary career. However, his endeavors were largely unsuccessful, save for his translations of Horace, which were praised enthusiastically by SJ. He owed many of his positions to his patron, Lord Holland, for whom he wrote some anonymous political works.
Foulkes was an Anglican clergyman and classical scholar who published very little. Acc. to the DNB, he published three Latin poems in 1695, 1688, and 1727, though there is no record of these in the ESTC or Foxon.
Flemyng was a physiologist who lectured and wrote on the topic. The DNB characterizes Flemyng as "typical of the new breed of Enlightened medical practitioners." He wrote one poem in Latin, Neuropathia, a treatise on hysteria.
His father's lavish lifestyle and large family left little inheritance for Fielding, forcing him to write for a living. He began by writing poems and plays. After a rocky start, he gained a reputation as a prolific playwright until June 1737, when the Theatrical Licensing Act effectively ended his career. This led to a period of financial burden, when he was imprisoned briefly for debt and attempted to alleviate his distress by translating the Military History of Charles XII for his bookseller John Nourse.
Fenton was a poet variously praised and criticized. He dedicated his works to several prominent noblemen. His tragedy, Mariamne, was his most popular and lucrative work. Fenton is also known for his work with Pope on the latter's Iliad and Odyssey.
Fatio was a natural philosopher and mathematician who worked closely with Newton. He published a number of scientific articles, as well as pieces on prophecies. He has one Latin poem, and published translations of psalms in GM. Throughout his career, he sought patronage form royalty and others.
As a result of his Jesuit beliefs, Farquharson was variously imprisoned and exiled, moving among Inverness, Douai, France, and the Netherlands, oftentimes with his community. A Gaelic poem by him, Rabhadh MhicShimidh (‘Warning to Lord Lovat’), is extant; he also "transcribed a volume of Gaelic poetry, mostly Ossianic, from oral sources, which was left at Douai and later maltreated and destroyed" (DNB). Like Edward Evan, Farquharson is an example of a poet in the Celtic bardic tradition whose work was not published/well-preserved in print.
Little is known about Farewell; his only published work is 'Farrago,' containing humorous poems and other literary works. Farewell describes himself as ‘sprung from antient gentility and fairly fortun'd’ but he was exiled to France as a result of a scandal.
Evans was a clergyman, poet, and well-known epigrammatist. Evans wrote politically charged, yet contradictory sermons, espousing at times zealous tory beliefs, and at others, staunch whig ones. Thomas Hearne concluded from Evans's vacillation that Evans was trying to get preferment from the whigs, though he was unsuccessful, as the college was his only ecclesiastical patron. A satire called The apparition is his most famous work.