Sir Thomas Lucy (24 April 15327 July 1600) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1571 and 1585. He was a magistrate in Warwickshire, but is best known for his links to William Shakespeare. As a Protestant activist, he came into conflict with Shakespeare's Catholic relatives, and there are stories that the young Shakespeare himself had clashes with him.
On his father's death, Lucy inherited Sherborne and Hampton Lucy in addition to the house of Charlecote Park, which was rebuilt for him in red brick by John of Padua, known as John Thorpe, about 1558. Through his marriage he also inherited Sutton Park in Worcestershire.
In 1565, he was knighted by the queen's favourite, Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, at the queen's behest.
In 1571, Lucy was elected Member of Parliament for Warwickshire. Elizabeth I herself visited Charlecote Park in 1572.
In 1584, there was a dispute between Ananias Nason, one of Lucy's servants, and Hamnet Sadler, a friend of Shakespeare. Lucy arbitrated in the matter. Lucy was re-elected MP for Warwickshire in 1585, and in 1586 he became high sheriff of the county.
He often appeared at Stratford-upon-Avon as justice of the peace and as commissioner of musters for the county. As a justice of the peace, he showed great zeal against Catholics and took his share in the arrest of Edward Arden in 1583.
Edmond Malone noted a different ballad seemingly ridiculing Lucy's marriage, which was still being sung in Stratford c. 1687–90 when Joshua Barnes heard it and wrote it down. a ballad mocking Lucy There is no evidence that Shakespeare wrote either ballad.
There are no surviving legal records to prove or disprove the poaching incident or the ballad incident. The poaching story became popular in the Victorian era period, appearing in many illustrations and paintings. In 1834 Walter Savage Landor published Citation and Examination of William Shakespeare, one of his "Imaginary Conversations", which is presented as the record of Shakespeare's examination by Lucy. Lucy is portrayed as a "mildly pretentious" figure, "longing for the good old days when classes knew their place".O'Sullivan, Maurice J., Shakespeare's Other Lives: An Anthology of Fictional Depictions of the Bard, McFarland, 2005, p. 44.
The story has been objected to on the grounds that there were no deer being kept in Charlecote until after Shakespeare's death. Edmond Malone wrote that Lucy did not own a park at this time and that it would have been illegal to keep deer outside a licensed deer park. John Semple Smart and Edgar Innes Fripp also tried to disprove the story by arguing that Lucy could not have kept deer in the 1580s.Joseph Pearce, The Quest for Shakespeare, Ignatius Press, 2008, p. 90; Smart, J. S., Shakespeare – Truth and Tradition, 1928, pp. 91–103 Samuel Schoenbaum, however, noted that Lucy had a "free warren", which would have supported rabbits, hares, pheasants and other birds, along with larger animals—which could have included roe-deer.
Samuel Schoenbaum says that a direct parody of Lucy is unlikely. Schoenbaum asks why Shakespeare would risk offending "well placed friends of a man who had done the state some service". The fact that the evidence for the alleged parody of Lucy is confined to the Merry Wives suggests that the character was not invented with Lucy in mind. Certainly "Lucy was, in physical form, social condition and personality, nothing like Shallow" as described in Henry IV, Part 2.Madison Davis, J., (ed), The Shakespeare Name and Place Dictionary, Routledge, 2012, p. 448. Leslie Hotson argues that the satire in Merry Wives is not directed at Lucy, but at William Gardiner, a corrupt Justice of the Peace whose coat of arms also contained luces, though Shakespeare may have remembered the luces/louses pun from anti-Lucy jokes in Stratford.Leslie Hotson, Shakespeare Versus Shallow, Little, Brown, and Company, Boston, 1931, p. 87. Shakespeare had come into conflict with Gardiner during the latter's attempts to close the Swan Theatre
Shakespeare
Poaching
For this he was prosecuted by that Gentleman, as he thought, somewhat too severely; and in order to revenge that ill Usage, he made a Ballad upon him. And tho' this, probably the first Essay of his Poetry, be lost, yet it is said to have been so very bitter, that it redoubled the Prosecution against him to that degree, that he was oblig'd to leave his Business and Family in Warwickshire, for some time, and shelter himself in London.
Justice Shallow as satire of Lucy
Family
Notes
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