- MAB
- Queen name-dropped in "Romeo and Juliet"
- Queen in Shelley's poetry
- Queen in a Mercutio speech
- Fairy queen of folklore
- Queen of "Romeo and Juliet"
- Queen of the fairies
- Queen who "comes in shape no bigger than an agate-stone"
- Fairies' midwife (Shak.)
- Midwife of dreams, in folklore
- Shelley's "Queen ___"
- She whose "chariot is an empty hazel-nut," in Shakespeare
- Who "gallops o'er a courtier's nose", per Mercutio
- Mercutio describes her as a bringer of dreams
- Shelley queen
- Spenser's Faerie Queene
- Fairy who delivered dreams in folklore
- Shakespeare's fairy queen
- Fairy queen
- Queen ___ of the fairies
- Folklore fairy queen
- Queen mentioned in "Romeo and Juliet"
- Uranian moon named for a fairy queen
- Fairy queen mentioned by Shakespeare
- Shelley's "Queen __"
- Fairy queen described by Mercutio
- Queen described by Mercutio
- Fairy queen of English legend
- Shakespearean fairy queen
- Queen of folklore
- Bard's fairy queen
- Queen in "Romeo and Juliet"
- Shelley's fairy queen
- Uranian moon named for a queen
- Queen in a speech by Mercutio
- Queen in a Shelley poem
- Shelley heroine.
- O, then, I see Queen ___ hath been with you: Mercutio
- Feminine name.
- In shape no bigger than an agate-stone.
- Oberon's mate.
- The fairies' midwife.
- Queen ___, Shelley poem.
- Her chariot is an empty hazel nut.
- No bigger than an agate stone on the forefinger of an alderman.
- Subject of Mercutio's famous speech.
- Queen described in "Romeo and Juliet."
- Predecessor of Titania.
- Subject of oft-quoted Mercutio speech.
- Oberon's spouse.
- Queen ___.
- Queen in English folklore.
- Relative of Titania.
- Shakespearean queen.
- Queen in Shakespeare.
- She is the fairies' midwife.
- Queen's name.
- Folklore queen.
- Mythical sovereign.
- Mercutio's subject
- Queen in folklore.
- Character in Drayton's "Nymphidia"
- Fairy queen governing men's dreams
- Fairies' queen
- Shelley subject
- The Bard's tiny queen
- The fairies' midwife: Shak.
- Dream producer of folklore
- Fairy queen of literature
- Dream controller of folklore
- Principal in a well-publicized breakup
- Fairies' midwife in "Romeo and Juliet"
- Fairy queen, in Shakespeare
- Mercutio speech subject
- She plagues ladies' lips with blisters, per Mercutio
- Midwife to the fairies, in Shakespeare
- Fairy queen in "Romeo and Juliet"
- Literary fairy queen
- Berlioz's "Queen ___" Scherzo
- Mischievous fairy queen
- Queen ___ (fairy referenced in "Romeo and Juliet")
- Queen of fairy tales
- Fairy queen whose chariot is an empty hazelnut, per Mercutio, in "Romeo and Juliet"
- Fairy queen mentioned in "Romeo and Juliet"
- Queenly dream-inducer
- Queen ___: Shelley
- Fairies' midwife, per Mercutio
- One of the moons of Uranus
- The fairies' midwife, according to Mercutio