| ___ queen! |
| Fairy queen. |
| Shelley queen |
| Fairies' queen |
| Shelley subject |
| Queen of folklore |
| Bard's fairy queen |
| Mythical sovereign |
| Shelley's "Queen __ |
| Shakespearean queen |
| Literary fairy queen |
| Folklore fairy queen |
| The Bard's tiny queen |
| Queenly dream-inducer |
| Folkloric fairy queen |
| Shelley's fairy queen |
| Mercutio speech subject |
| Predecessor of Titania. |
| Queen in a Shelley poem |
| Fairy queen of folklore |
| Queen ___ of the fairies |
| Fairy queen of literature |
| Queen in Shelley's poetry |
| Shakespearean fairy queen |
| Shakespeare's fairy queen |
| Dream producer of folklore |
| One of the moons of Uranus |
| Queen in "Romeo and Juliet |
| Queen of "Romeo and Juliet |
| Fairy queen, in Shakespeare |
| Queen described by Mercutio |
| The fairies' midwife": Shak. |
| Dream controller of folklore |
| Fairy queen of English legend |
| Queen in a speech by Mercutio |
| Uranian moon named for a queen |
| Fairy queen in "Romeo and Juliet |
| Character in Drayton's "Nymphidia |
| Fairy queen described by Mercutio |
| Fairy queen governing men's dreams |
| Fairy queen who assisted with dreams |
| Queen mentioned in "Romeo and Juliet |
| Fairies' midwife" in "Romeo and Juliet |
| Midwife to the fairies, in Shakespeare |
| Principal in a well-publicized breakup |
| Fairy queen mentioned in "Romeo and Juliet |
| The fairies' midwife," according to Mercutio |
| Queen ___ (fairy referenced in "Romeo and Juliet") |
| She plagues ladies' lips with blisters, per Mercutio |
| O, then, I see Queen ___ hath been with you": Mercutio |
| Queen who "comes in shape no bigger than an agate-stone |
| Fairy queen who carried a "whip of cricket's bone," in Shakespeare |