Capel or Capell Lofft (14 November 1751 – 26 May 1824) was an English lawyer, minor political figure and miscellaneous writer.
Born in London, he was educated at Eton College, and Peterhouse, Cambridge, which he left to become a member of Lincoln's Inn. He was called to the bar in 1775, and the deaths of his father and uncle left him with a handsome property and the family estates. A Foxite Whig, he was a prolific writer on the law and political topics, a vigorous and contentious advocate of parliamentary and other reforms, and carried on a voluminous correspondence with all the literary men of his time. A strong supporter of Napoleon, he wrote numerous letters to the press (Morning Chronicle 31 July and 10 August 1815) opposing the Government's decision to send Napoleon to St Helena and himself attempted to serve a writ of habeas corpus while Napoleon was held on board a ship in Plymouth.
He had also came to grief earlier in his own county. On the night of 3rd October,1799, Sarah Lloyd, a 22 year old servant girl, let her 'abandoned seducer' into her mistresses house, and became apparently 'the instrument in his hand of crimes of robbery and house-burning. She stole 40 shillings and suffered the ultimate penalty-death by hanging. Capel Lofft fought strenuously for a reprieve, but failed, and on the morning of 23rd April, 1800, she was trundled along in a cart to the place of execution in Bury. It was raining and Capel Lofft, performed the last service he could for her. He walked beside the cart and held his umbrella over her. He stayed by her side right up to the minute of her execution. Authority took a dim view of his fight on her behalf, and he was struck off the Roll. <http://stanton.onesuffolk.net/assets/Village-information/Stanton-local-history.pdf>
He became the patron of Robert Bloomfield, the author of The Farmer's Boy, and was responsible for the publication of that work. Byron, in a note to his English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, ridiculed Lofft as "the Maecenas of shoemakers and preface-writer general to distressed versemen; a kind of gratis accoucheur to those who wish to be delivered of rhyme, but do not know how to bring forth."