Rouse was born in
Calcutta,
British India on 30 May 1863. After his family returned home on leave to Britain, Rouse was sent to
Regent's Park College in
London, where he studied as a lay student. In 1881 he won a scholarship to
Christ's College, Cambridge. He achieved a double first in the Classical
Tripos at the
University of Cambridge, where he also studied
Sanskrit. He became a Fellow of Christ's College in 1888, and later received the degree
Doctor in Letters from the college in early 1903. After brief spells at
Bedford School (1886–1888) and
Cheltenham College (1890–1895), he became a master at
Rugby School, where he encouraged
Arthur Ransome to become a writer, against his parents' wishes. Ransome later wrote: "My greatest piece of good fortune in coming to Rugby was that I passed so low into the school ... that I came at once into the hands of a most remarkable man whom I might otherwise never have met. This was Dr W.H.D. Rouse." Rouse was appointed headmaster of
The Perse School, Cambridge, in 1902. He restored it to a sound financial footing following a crisis. He believed firmly in learning by doing as well as by seeing and hearing. Although the curriculum at the Perse was dominated by classics, he urged that science should be learned through experiment and observation. He was described by the school archivist as the school's greatest headmaster: "Rouse was strongly independent to the point of eccentricity. He hated most machines, all bureaucracy and public exams." He retired from teaching in 1928. In 1911 Rouse started a successful series of summer schools for teachers to encourage the use of the direct method of teaching Latin and Greek. The
Association for the Reform of Latin Teaching (ARLT) was formed in 1913 as a result of these seminars. The same year,
James Loeb chose W.H.D. Rouse, together with two other eminent classical scholars,
T. E. Page and
Edward Capps, to be founding editors of the
Loeb Classical Library. Rouse is known for his plain English prose translations of Homer's
Odyssey (1937) and
Iliad (1938). He is also recognized for his translations of some of Plato's dialogues, including
The Republic,
Apology,
Crito, and
Phaedo. Rouse died on
Hayling Island on 10 February 1950. ==Bibliography==