My parents shared a love that most only dream of. It was not flamboyant, not loud, not showy but deep, calm, genuine. A love born not of passion but of trust, warmth and respect. It ran alongside them from their first meeting until the very last day, when my father, already frail, slipped quietly away at the age of eighty.
Mother still recalls every tiny detail of their years together. How he would bring her on his railway trips the finest York biscuits, knowing she savoured each one with her tea. How he searched the village market for that particular farmhouse cheese she adored, because any other just isnt the same. How, in the middle of an ordinary working day, he would arrange for a bouquet to be delivered to her no reason, simply to whisper, I love you.
They lived in a modest cottage in a Somerset village beside the woods. There were no restaurants, no flower shops. So father gifted mother what grew nearby: lilies of the valley, bluebells, daisies, cornflowers. He would walk out to the meadow after work, even when weary, and return with a bunch in his hand. He did this every year, as long as his feet could carry him. And when illness confined him to bed, mother herself would go out into the garden and pluck the flowers to lay beside him.
Their love was simple, and in that simplicity lay true beauty. There were no grand gestures, no expensive gifts, no booming declarations only small things filled with meaning. Their feelings were felt in every glance, in the way mother adjusted his scarf, in the way he offered his hand even when she could have done it herself.
Once, father forgot that the day marked their wedding anniversary. It was summer, and to tease her he presented a bouquet of potato blossoms. Mother laughed until tears rolled down her cheeks and later declared it the warmest gift she ever received, for it contained everything care, tenderness and a pinch of childlike spontaneity that she loved so much.
I also remember a tale mother told often. She went away for a teaching course in another town, leaving father at home with the children. After a few days he asked the neighbour to lend a hand and slipped quietly away to her just to spend two days together, attend the local playhouse and stroll the evening lanes. In his eyes shone the same light that had glimmered when he first asked her out.
Their love lived not in words but in deeds. In the morning cups of tea he carried to her in bed. In the walks to the river where they sat on the bank listening to crickets. In the quiet anticipation of spring, when they together watched the ice melt from the water. In the way they understood each other without explanation or demand, simply feeling it in their hearts.
When father returned from a work trip, mother always sensed the exact moment of his arrival. She would say, Hell be here today, and never be wrong. She waited for him even when he tried to surprise her. In return he left short notes on scraps of paper: Love you. Kiss. George. Those simple, sincere words were dearer to her than any grand confession.
Their life was not perfect there were hardships, quarrels, lean times, illnesses. Yet they never forgot the main point: they were a team. Their love needed no proof, because it simply existed.
So when someone claims true love is a myth, a invention of films or novels, I only smile. I have seen it with my own eyes. I have watched two people stay side by side all their lives not out of habit, not out of duty, but because love grows, changes, yet never fades.
I saw it in mothers gaze today as she placed a small vase of fresh flowers beside fathers photograph. In that quiet gesture lay an entire lifetime. Their love story real, unadorned, as enduring as the English countryside.







