Frank J. Wilstach, comp. A Dictionary of Similes. 1916.
Sway
Swayed like a column in an earthquake.
—Anonymous
Swaying like a lily.
—Anonymous
Like a branch she sways with supple ply.
—Arabian Nights
Swayed like a flower stalk in a gale.
—John D. Barry
Swayed like a bird on a twig.
—Arnold Bennett
Swayed and bent as gracefully as doth a lily-bell, when by the summer zephyr gently kissed.
—William Cartwright
Sway, like a water-plant in a wave.
—Alice Cary
Swayed at the top like a tree.
—Joseph Conrad
Swayed rhythmically in one direction like a wheatfield in a squall.
—Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Sway, like a trim galley, at her anchorage between two seas.
—Frederick William Faber
Swayed like a river weed.
—Thomas Hardy
Swayed like a pole in the tideway.
—Maurice Hewlett
Swayed … as the sling swings its projectile.
—Victor Hugo
Swaying like a reed.
—Victor Hugo
Swayed, like grain-fields when the wind breathes over them.
—Sigmund Krasinski
Swaying like wind-swung bell.
—George MacDonald
Swaying about like a fat goose with enormous legs and yielding knees.
—Guy de Maupassant
Sway, as the calm joy of flowers, and living leaves before the wind.
—Percy Bysshe Shelley
Sway’d
Like those long mosses in the stream.
—Alfred Tennyson
Swayed as the reeds sway in the blast.
—John Greenleaf Whittier