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Home  »  A Dictionary of Similes  »  Drop

Frank J. Wilstach, comp. A Dictionary of Similes. 1916.

Drop

Dropped, like Icarus, in mid-sky.
—Thomas Bailey Aldrich

Drop him like a hot potato.
—Anonymous

Drops like a wounded lily.
—Anonymous

Drops like mercury on a cold day.
—Anonymous

Dropped off like a repleted leech.
—Anonymous

Drops like a plummet.
—Matthew Arnold

Dropt like a rose o’er-blown.
—Aphra Behn

Dropped like a lily broke down by the hail.
—Lady Barnard

Drop off like leaves in autumn.
—Robert Blair

Fluttering to the ground, dropped like a wounded bird.
—Mathilde Blind

Dropped … like a spent horse.
—George H. Boker

Dropped heavily
As century follows century
Into the deep eternity.
—Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Drop like shot.
—Robert Browning

Dropped as dead.
—Aubrey De Vere

Dropped like flakes, they dropped like stars, like petals from a rose.
—Emily Dickinson

Dropped like a flower cut down by the sickle.
—Alexandre Dumas, père

The blood dropped out of her cheeks as the mercury drops from a broken barometer-tube, and she melted away from her seat as an image of snow.
—Oliver Wendell Holmes

Music drops like balm into the drowsy ear.
—Mrs. Emily Chubbuck Judson

Drop like hours into eternity.
—John Keats

The slow mists of the evening dropped,
Dropped as a cloth upon a dead man’s face.
—Rudyard Kipling

He dropped like a bullock.
—Rudyard Kipling

Men dropped like partridges.
—Rudyard Kipling

Drop, like mellow fruit … into the grave.
—Charles Lamb

Dropt from the zenith like a falling star.
—John Milton

Dropped like a stone down through the deep sea.
—Dinah Maria Mulock

Dropped, as by a thunder-stroke.
—William Shakespeare

Drop tears as fast as the Arabian trees
Their medicinal gum.
—William Shakespeare

Droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven.
—William Shakespeare

Drop as a leaf drops dead.
—Algernon Charles Swinburne

Dropping like flies, devoured
By winter as if by fire, starved, frozen, blind,
Maimed, mad with torment, dying in hell.
—Algernon Charles Swinburne