Similes: Light
Light as flake of foam. —Hans Christian Andersen
Light as hope. —Charles Pierre Baudelaire
Light as a wind-blown leaf. —Charlotte Becker
Light as cobwebs. —R. D. Blackmore
Light-footed as a hare. —Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen
Light as the fabric which swells in the ambient air. —Samuel Boyse
Light as a feather whisk. —Robert Browning
Light as the whispers of a dream. —William Cullen Bryant
Light as a faint wreath of snow
That tremblest to fall in the wind. —Robert Buchanan
Light as gossamer. —Thomas Carlyle
Light as winds that stir the willow. —Alice Cary
Light as the busy clouds. —Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Light as the vapours of a morning dream. —John Dryden
Light like a sunbeam shattered into mist. —Richard Hovey
Light as fairy footsteps. —Evan MacColl
Light as a bubble that flies from the tub,
Whisked by the laundry-wife out of her suds. —George Meredith
Light as the dancing skiff borne on the silvery tide. —Friedrich von Schiller
Light as a feather. —Sophocles
Light as a lady’s plumes. —Robert Southey
Light as a spring south-wind. —Algernon Charles Swinburne
Light as a buoyant bark from wave to wave. —William Wordsworth
Light as a sunbeam glides along the hills. —William Wordsworth