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In medieval times, Cockaigne was a mythical land of plenty.
Everyone was seeking renewal, a golden century, a Cockaigne of the spirit.
This is an expert of a poem about Cockaigne:
The name of the town is a reference to Cockaigne, a medieval fictional land of plenty.
It was named after Cockaigne, a mythical paradise in medieval French literature.
It was released on Cockaigne with distribution by Fuse.
Cockaigne is well represented on record.
In Cockaigne the rivers run with wine, the hills are made of sugar candy and there are no lawyers.
An alternative derivation is from the word Cockaigne, a term for a mythical luxurious country, first recorded in 1362.
The amount of vanilla in the Brownies Cockaigne has been increased to intensify the flavor.
This was the origin of the legend of the Land of Cockaigne.
Cockaigne - A skiing facility in the southwest corner of the town, west of Thornton.
Writing about Cockaigne was a commonplace of Goliard verse.
Give me Cockaigne.
Mythical lands like Cockaigne, vulgar versions of grander imaginings, occur in many cultures.
Cockaigne, from medieval legend.
Cockaigne was a "medieval peasant's dream, offering relief from backbreaking labor and the daily struggle for meager food."
"Drugs are Wasted on the Young" - Cockaigne (February 2000)
"Out of the Loop" - Cockaigne (12 June 2000)
- Cockaigne (25 September 2000)
Knock Yourself Out - Cockaigne (30 May 2009)
Alice Texas - Gold Cockaigne (2000)
It was also re-released on Cockaigne in 2004 with extra tracks from albums after Coral Snakes disbanded.
Heroic Blues - Cockaigne (2002)
The Brother Who Lived - Cockaigne (October 2003)