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    • To avoid Lucy's punishment

      • According to Davies, Shakespeare was known to poach deer and rabbits on the property of local landowner Sir Thomas Lucy, who "who oft had him whipped and sometimes imprisoned." Rowe elaborated that Shakespeare eventually left Stratford to avoid Lucy's punishment.
      www.bardweb.net/content/ac/lostyears.html
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  2. A popular story revolves around Shakespeare’s relationship with Sir Thomas Lucy, a local Stratford-upon-Avon landowner. By oral tradition, it was reported that Shakespeare poached deer from Sir Thomas Lucy’s estate, the nearby Charlecote Park. It was said that he fled to London in order to escape punishment.

  3. From the late 1580s, William Shakespeare started to divide his time up between Stratford-upon-Avon and London; his family and professional lives. Shakespeare’s wife and children remained in Stratford and he made most of his financial investments in his home town.

  4. Rowe elaborated that Shakespeare eventually left Stratford to avoid Lucy's punishment. Rowe even says that Shakespeare lampooned Lucy in a ballad, and there are those that believe Justice Shallow of The Merry Wives of Windsor is based largely upon Shakespeare's supposed tormentor.

  5. First, why did Shakespeare leave Stratford? And second, how did Shakespeare find his way into the London theater scene? In answer to the first question, scholars hypothesize that Shakespeare left Stratford due to some kind of conflict with the wealthy gentleman Sir Thomas Lucy.

  6. Why and when did William Shakespeare go to London? The last record of Shakespeare in Stratford, before he joined the theatrical world in London, was in 1585. There is much speculation about what prompted him to leave his home town and his family, also about what he did during his absence, because records are sketchy and few.

  7. Jul 3, 2018 · We know that Shakespeare disappeared from Stratford, perhaps to spend time with a travelling theatre company, which is termed ‘the lost years’ – but certainly not due to his dislike of the rutty parallel way or road surfaces marked with dung.

  8. Stratford-upon-Avon is the town where William Shakespeare was born and is buried. Every year, millions of people celebrate his life and work by visiting the town. You'll find Shakespeare's home town in the heart of England, on the banks of the river Avon.

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