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Examples
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The Brits had become masters of the game by the time of the Faerie Queene's reign in the 16th century and, according to Paul, The mystical past and the modern intelligence professional merged for the first time in the Elizabethan police state.
Michael Hughes: Book Review: The Voice by Elizabeth Gould and Paul Fitzgerald Michael Hughes 2011
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During the Queene's banishment, the high priestess Danae established herself as ruler and she does not wish to relinquish her power, especially over the devout humans who live among the Fae as servants.
New Book Releases for Urban Fantasy, Paranormal Romance and Fantasy – November 24, 2009 Donna 2009
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During the Queene's banishment, the high priestess Danae established herself as ruler and she does not wish to relinquish her power, especially over the devout humans who live among the Fae as servants.
Archive 2009-11-01 Donna 2009
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Christmas: If you had gone to the Queene's Chappel, you might have found him standing against the wall, and the Papists weeping, and beating themselves before him, and kissing his hoary head with superstitious teares, in a theater exceeding all the plays of the
A Righte Merrie Christmasse The Story of Christ-Tide John Ashton
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_ -- A good description of this once popular mart may be found in Lodwick Rowzee's _Treatise on the Queene's Welles_, Lond.
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As it hath bene diuerse times acted at the Red Bull, by the Queene's
Microcosmography or, a Piece of the World Discovered; in Essays and Characters John Earle
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I copy from a folio edition of the Geneva Bible, "imprinted at London by Christopher Barker, printer to the Queene's Majesty, 1578."
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They vary in height from 12in. to 18in., branching candelabra-like, the flowers being produced in terminal spikes, arranged in the way of, and very much resembling, the double stocks -- in fact, the Hesperis used to be called "Queene's Gilloflower."
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"A description and playne discourse of paper, and the whole benefits that paper brings, with rehearsall, and setting foorth in verse a paper-myll built near Darthforth, by an high Germaine, called Master Spilman, jeweller to the Queene's Majyestie."
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Children of the Revels, the same playhouse to be used by the Children of the Revels for the time being of the Queene's Majesty, and for the
Shakespearean Playhouses A History of English Theatres from the Beginnings to the Restoration Joseph Quincy Adams 1913
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