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Sunday, December 16, 2018

'Diary on Elizabethan Times Essay\r'

'To sidereal day I was filled to the top with euphory because catch promised me she would take m to London for my birthday. I woke up abnormally early and washed my daring with cold water and put on my favorite polka-dotted dress. I fixed my bed sheets and sprayed a humiliated amount of perfume onto my clothes. I glanced at my carrier bag watch and found that it was already five o’clock; it would take two hours to push there. I raced down the stairs and shoved a few spoons of strain into my mouth and sprinted back upstairs to awake my dor piececy mother. My mother took an everlasting period of time to get ready and when she did she started putting make up on.\r\nWhilst I was waiting I was reading a entertain about the history of London and how Henry the one-eighth’s palace was there. When my mother had finally got ready, we clambered into the awaiting turnout; it was pulled by a beautiful, black mare, who, before I climbed into the carriage, stroked. When we ar rived at London I was greeted to the smell of angelic baked bread, but I also visualize screaming and shouting. As we drove past I felt sick and turned green, it was law day and someone was being executed. Their intestines had just been ripped out and the objet dart’s face had a look of pure(a) terror.\r\nHis intestines were probably the last thing he saw. I turned away. These good deal were barbaric. As we passed my mother arranged the driver to stop and I opened the introduction and found myself looking at St. Marys of Bethlehem, I had invariably wanted to come here. As I entered I could hear laughter, I turned round the recession and found myself staring at dancing peasant. At first I was extremely confused, and because I saw the people poking them. Anger boil in my stomach, people were provoking the poor people by hitting them with sharp sticks forcing them to dance. I had had enough.\r\nI stormed back to the carriage fuming and my mother gave me a opposed look . She told the driver to go somewhere, I couldn’t hear her because she was whispering, and the man grinned. The man was driving, I didn’t have it away where to, I was lost in my thoughts of anger. But when the man did stop I was shocked to find myself in front of The Globe, the most famous theatre in the world. I raced over and hugged my mother as overweight as I could; she laughed and kissed me on the head. We held hands and sauntered into the theatre. My mother paid two one penny pieces and we walked into the theatre. We then watched Romeo and Juliet.\r\n'

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