Lexicographical Neighbors of Seawoman
Literary usage of Seawoman
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Dublin University Magazine: A Literary and Political Journal (1860)
"... seawoman ¡us spirited as our heroine to abstain from boarding a British bark
t Again, the age was one when naval adventure, as exhibited in Raleigh, ..."
2. The Silence of Amor [and] Where the Forest Murmurs by William Sharp (1910)
"It is as though a seawoman rose and fell, idly swam or idly swung this way and
that, asleep on the tide: nothing visible of her wave-grey body but only her ..."
3. The Bibelot: A Reprint of Poetry and Prose for Book Lovers, Chosen in Part by Thomas Bird Mosher, John Keats (1904)
"You are a strange love for a seawoman," he said: "and why do you go putting your
earth-heart to her sea-heart ?" The man said he did not know, ..."