Lucy’s father, a pugnacious, hard-drinking clergyman, was the heir male of the old Warwickshire parliamentary family of Lucy
He died 30 June 1845, esteemed for his punctuality and fidelity to duty, polished mind and refined taste, which he displayed in the restoration of Charlecote, inherited ‘in a dilapidated condition’. He displayed, it was said, ‘the spirit of a gentleman of the olden time’. Beneath the surface, however, he suffered considerable ‘nervous unease’, being easily overwhelmed by trifling mishaps such as the weather, changes of plan or unpunctuality; as for Fowey, in his wife’s words, ‘a sad purchase it turned out; it cost a mint of money and an infinity of trouble and vexation of spirit (and gave me many a heartache in after years)’. After the disfranchisement of Fowey, Lucy was ‘repeatedly solicited’ to represent Warwickshire, but declined.
