The King's Horses and Men visited the Queen in the nursery rhyme "Humpty Dumpty."
The pussycat in the nursery rhyme "Hey Diddle Diddle" went to London to visit the Queen.
He went to Happy Days :)
The owl and the pussycat went to Gloucester in the nursery rhyme.
because he needed to get out and enjoy his life
Report it immediately.
The correct English is "You went to visit him." "You went to visit with him." is not actually incorrect, if what is meant is that you and he went visiting together. (The emphasis is on the fact that he went as well.) However, that is just not such a common thing to say.
Prince Philip was in the navy or something like that and whilst the Queens father was king he went on a visit to where Prince Philip was. The Queen at the time was only 13 and she fell in love with him; they then later married and had children and that is how Prince Philip and the Queen meet.
In the rhyme, Dr Foster went to Gloucester.
In "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury, four things went wrong with the nursery: the children became too attached to the virtual reality it created, the nursery started manifesting the children's dark thoughts, the parents lost control of the children's behavior, and ultimately the nursery became a dangerous place that reflected the children's desire for independence and control.
Queen Mary went by May, and The Old Queen.
Marjorie Daw went by The Girl with the Nursery Rhyme Name.
Yes, "Jack and Jill went up the hill" is a nursery rhyme, not a ballad. Ballads are typically longer narrative songs that tell a story, while nursery rhymes are shorter and often designed for children.