"I'm Like All Lovers" is a poem by Australian poet Lesbia Harford.
[1] It was written in 1917, though first published in the poet's collection The Poems of Lesbia Harford in 1941 under the title "Poems XIV", and later in other Australian poetry anthologies.
A woman, the poet, speaks plainly to her man demanding that he ask no more of her than she asks of him, noting that she is free and so should he be, and that it is her love that sets him free, as long as he loves the woman in her.
In his commentary on the poem in 60 Classic Australian Poems Geoff Page called the poem "curiously both modern and traditional."
He also noted that in "1917 it may well have been ahead of its time (especially in Australia), but it has already outlived that time and promises to be around for quite a while yet".