1. The Teacup Heart
In quiet corners of an English day,
Where rain taps gently and skies are grey,
I think of you with gentle grace,
Like Earl Grey steam in porcelain's embrace.
2. 1. The Teacup Heart
Along the Thames where shadows fall,
I heard your name in a raven's call.
The lamp-lit streets knew what I hide—
That love once walked here by my side.
3. Timeless Tea and You
I set two cups though I sit alone,
The clock ticks soft in gentle tone.
Oh love, if only time could bend,
We'd share this tea, just like old friends.
4. A British Garden Farewell
Through roses red and daisies pale,
Your laughter danced like springtime's tale.
But now the garden grows so still,
As though it mourns against its will.
5. The Postman's Secret
A letter came, the ink had bled,
As if your heart had softly said—
“I miss the talks at half-past three,
And wish you still believed in me.”
6. Oxford Days
The library smelled of worn-out leather,
We read of love and cursed the weather.
Your smile lit more than candlelight—
A scholar’s flame, so warm, so bright.
7. Foggy Whisper
The London fog hides many truths,
Of poets’ dreams and vanished youths.
But deep within the mist’s embrace,
I search for just one ghostlike face.
8. Countryside Confession
Beneath a willow near a stream,
You spoke of love, or so I dream.
Now leaves drift past where once we lay,
And silence has the final say.
9. Tea-Time Memory
She stirred her tea with dainty hand,
And said, “True love must understand.”
Yet here I sit, with sugar’s swirl,
Still chasing ghosts of that sweet girl.
10. Rain on the Window
Raindrops sketch your name in streaks,
My heart replies though no one speaks.
Oh England’s rain, you know me well—
You weep the words I cannot tell.
11. The Last Tube
I missed the last train from your eyes,
A moment lost beneath the skies.
Now midnight holds its breath so tight,
While I walk home through London’s night.
12. British Reserve
We never said it—oh, too proud,
Our hearts spoke soft, never aloud.
But every glance, each cup of tea,
Held “I love you,” silently.
13. The Bench at Hyde Park
The wooden bench remembers us,
Though time has made its bolts all rust.
We carved initials side by side—
A love no season could divide.
14. Pub Poem
At The Quiet Fox where poets meet,
I sip stout ale, recall your feet—
The way they danced on checker tiles,
And warmed cold winters with their smiles.
15. A Proper Goodbye
No drama, no tear-laced scene,
Just autumn leaves where you had been.
You left with grace, like English skies—
Still grey, still vast, still dignified.
British hearts may not often cry,
But when they love, they love so high.
In quiet rooms and gentle rain,
They bloom, they break, and bloom again.
