He was born in Belfast, the son of a Dublin-born Church of Ireland clergyman the Rev. Bedell Stanford, rector of Dundrum, County Down, and Susan Stanford (née Jackson).[1] He was educated at Bishop Foy's School in Waterford, where a special teacher had to be recruited to coach him in Greek.
He subsequently won a sizarship to Trinity College Dublin. He was elected a Scholar in his first year at Trinity,[2] having become an undergraduate in October 1928.[3] He also served as auditor of the College Classical Society. He was editor of TCD: A College Miscellany in Hilary term of 1931. He became a Fellow in 1934 and was one of the last Fellows to be elected by examination. Stanford was one of seven candidates nominated for the Provostship of the Trinity College on 11 March 1952 but was eliminated along with two other candidates in the first round of the election. He was considered, at the age of 42, to be too junior.[4] The successful candidate on that occasion was the mathematician, Albert Joseph McConnell, who remained in office for 22 years.
Stanford established himself as a Greek scholar in his twenties with the publication of two books which approached Greek literature as a subject for literary criticism, Greek Metaphor and Ambiguity in Greek Literature.[1] He is perhaps best remembered for his commentaries aimed at students on Homer's Odyssey, Aristophanes' Frogs, and Sophocles' Ajax.
In 1965, Stanford gave the Sather Lectures at the University of California, Berkeley, on the topic of the pronunciation of Ancient Greek. The lectures were revised into a book published in 1967.
Stanford had a particular interest in the classical tradition, in Ireland and elsewhere, and published a number of articles on this topic in the Trinity journal Hermathena, as well as a wide-ranging book entitled Ireland and the Classical Tradition.
Stanford's poetry appears in several anthologies and his posthumously published memoirs.
After Stanford's death, a series of lectures in his honour was established at Trinity College, Dublin. The first lecturer in the series was Duncan F. Kennedy, a former student of Stanford's.
Seanad career
He also represented the Dublin University constituency in Seanad Éireann from 1948 to 1969.[5] During the 1950s, however, he came out publicly against the Fethard-on-Sea boycott, and he also demanded an inquiry into the assault on Jehovah's Witnesses in Clare. In both cases, Éamon de Valera proved sympathetic personally but declined to take any public action. As a leader of the Republic of Ireland's small Protestant population, Stanford was a lifelong champion of the proportional representation electoral process, believing that it protected the rights of minorities.
Bibliography
Greek Metaphor: Studies in Theory and Practice, Oxford 1936
Ambiguity in Greek Literature, Oxford 1939
Aeschylus in His Style: A Study in Language and Personality, Dublin 1942
The Odyssey of Homer, Vol.1 (Books 1–12), London 1947
The Odyssey of Homer, Vol.2 (Books 13–24), London 1948
The Ulysses Theme: A Study in the Adaptability of a Traditional Hero, Oxford 1955; second ed. Putnam, Conn. 1993
The Frogs, by Aristophanes, London 1958
Ajax, by Sophocles, London 1963
The Sound of Greek: Studies in the Greek Theory and Practice of Euphony, Berkeley 1967
^J.V. Luce, 'William Bedell Stanford: A memorial address' in Ross Hinds (ed.), William Bedell Stanford: Regius Professor of Greek 1940–80: Trinity College, Dublin: Memoirs (Hinds, Dublin 2002) p. 229.