Sonnet III By Alan Seeger

    Why should you be astonished that my heart,
    Plunged for so long in darkness and in dearth,
    Should be revived by you, and stir and start
    As by warm April now, reviving Earth?
    I am the field of undulating grass
    And you the gentle perfumed breath of Spring,
    And all my lyric being, when you pass,
    Is bowed and filled with sudden murmuring.
    I asked you nothing and expected less,
    But, with that deep, impassioned tenderness
    Of one approaching what he most adores,
    I only wished to lose a little space
    All thought of my own life, and in its place
    To live and dream and have my joy in yours.