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Princess Diana-Cherry Gilchrist

Diana was born in Sandringham, Norfolk in 1961 to Frances and Johnnie Spencer. The Spencers were an aristocratic family who had long-standing ties to the British royal family. Diana had a difficult childhood as her parents divorced when she was young. She attended boarding school and had various jobs caring for children after graduating. In 1981, it was announced that Diana would marry Prince Charles, making her the future Princess of Wales. Though they did not know each other well initially, Charles and Diana seemed a perfect match as she came from a noble family and could fulfill the role as queen.

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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
3K views29 pages

Princess Diana-Cherry Gilchrist

Diana was born in Sandringham, Norfolk in 1961 to Frances and Johnnie Spencer. The Spencers were an aristocratic family who had long-standing ties to the British royal family. Diana had a difficult childhood as her parents divorced when she was young. She attended boarding school and had various jobs caring for children after graduating. In 1981, it was announced that Diana would marry Prince Charles, making her the future Princess of Wales. Though they did not know each other well initially, Charles and Diana seemed a perfect match as she came from a noble family and could fulfill the role as queen.

Uploaded by

Balnur Aman
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CHAPTER ONE

The Girl with a Future

On 1 July 1961, a baby girl was born at her family home, in


Sandringham, Norfolk. Her parents, Frances and Johnnie Spencer, couldn't
decide what to call her at first. They had two daughters already, and this
time they really wanted a boy. Finally, they called her 'Diana'. They didn't
know that in the future the name Diana Spencer would be famous all over
the world. They could not guess how popular she would be in her short but
full life.

The Spencers are a very old English family. They became rich a long
time ago as sheep farmers, and the family goes back to King Charles II and
King James II of England. They have been friends and helpers of the Royal
Family for hundreds of years.

The house they lived in then, Park House, was near the Queen's house
at Sandringham, so Diana grew up almost 'next door' to the Royal Family.
Diana often visited them at Sandringham House when she was a little girl.
The Queen's most important homes are at Buckingham Palace in London,
and Windsor Castle just to the west of London. But she also spends time at
Balmoral Castle in Scotland, and at Sandringham House, which is in the
east of England.

Later, people called Diana 'a fairy-tale princess'. But her story was
often a sad one too. Her parents had the son that they wanted so much in
1964 - they called him Charles. But their marriage was unhappy, and soon
terrible fights began. When Diana was only six, her mother, Frances, ran
away with another man, Peter Shand Kydd.

For a long time, the children could only visit their mother at
weekends. Frances very much wanted her children to live with her. But
their father was against the idea, and so they stayed at Park House with him.
Other women came to the house to look after the children, but they didn't
usually stay long. The children made trouble for them - they threw their
clothes out of the window, or locked them in the toilet! The two smallest
children, Charles and Diana, were really unhappy. Each night in bed,
Charles cried for his mother, and Diana lay there alone, listening to him.
She was too frightened of the dark house to get out of bed and go to him.

But Diana and Charles were a loving brother and sister. As time went
on, they often travelled by train together to visit their mother. Diana was
always friendly with her two older sisters, Sarah and Jane, but they had
different lives.

Johnnie Spencer tried to do his best for the four children, and at
Christmas they could choose all the presents that they wanted. There were
too many presents, and not enough hugs and kisses, they remembered later.
Diana loved her father, and wanted to look after him. She liked to help in
the house too, and to look after her animals. She had a cat, Marmalade, and
a dog called Jill. Like a lot of English girls, Diana learned to ride a horse,
but after she broke her arm in an accident she was frightened, and didn't
want to ride again.

Like the children in many rich or old families in England, the Spencer
children went away to school. Diana went to Riddlesworth Hall School in
1970 when she was only seven. She lived there during the term, and came
home in the holidays. In 1974, she went on to her mother's old school, West
Heath School in Kent, which was on the other side of London from
Norfolk. Her sisters Sarah and Jane were also students there.

By then, her mother wasn't living in London, but in Scotland. She and
her husband Peter had a large farm on an island. It was a wild and beautiful
place, and Diana had some lovely holidays there.

In Diana's young life, everything was always changing, and she often
felt alone. She was very sad when her grandmother - her father s mother -
died in 1972. Her grandmother was a very kind woman. She looked after
Diana a lot when her parents separated. Things changed even more in 1975
when her grandfather died too, and the Spencer family moved into the old
family home at Althorp, in Northamptonshire. Diana's father was now Earl
Spencer, Diana became Lady Diana Spencer, and her brother Charles a
Viscount. Later, he too became an Earl.
Until then, Park House in Sandringham was the only home that Diana
knew. She didn't like going to Sandringham House to visit the royal family
much - she felt strange in the royal house. But she loved Park House, with
its friendly rooms and its big garden. She could go swimming in the pool
there, play tennis, or hide in the tree-house. The children didn't really want
to live at Althorp. They didn't enjoy their visits there when their grandfather
was alive. The house was large, dark and frightening, with lots of old family
pictures on the walls. But as they grew up, they liked it more. They enjoyed
having their friends to stay - it was a good house for parties!

At school, Diana made plenty of friends. She was a good student, not
especially clever, but she enjoyed her lessons. She liked English and
painting, but she was best at dancing and swimming. It was soon clear that
she would never go to university, but she was helpful and kind. She even
won a cup for helpfulness! As part of the school's charity programme,
Diana began to visit old or ill people in the town near the school. Usually,
she talked to them, or helped with their shopping. This is perhaps where her
love of charity work began.

But she was not always quite so good. Once she got into real trouble
when she left the school at night! She planned to meet a friend outside the
school to get some sweets from her. One of the teachers found her empty
bed and called the police! The head teacher was very angry, but her parents
were secretly amused.

When Diana left West Heath School, she was sixteen. At first, she
didn't know what to do. Life at home was changing again because her father
had a new wife. Her name was Raine, and she was the daughter of Barbara
Cartland, a famous writer of love stories. Diana and her brother and sisters
were not very pleased about the marriage. They didn't want Raine as their
second mother, and were always fighting with her.

But Johnnie loved his new wife, and they were very happy together.
And, in the end, Diana was pleased that Raine was there to look after her
father. In 1978, a year after the marriage, Johnnie became very ill. The
doctors thought that he would die. Raine nursed him back to health, but it
was a long time before he was better again.
A little earlier, in 1977, Diana went off to a very expensive 'finishing'
school in Switzerland because she didn't want to stay at home. Girls from
rich families went there to learn to cook, to speak French, and to look after
a home. Diana only stayed there for six weeks, then decided that she wanted
to go back to England to work. In the past, girls from important families
like the Spencers never worked for money. But times were different now,
and Diana wanted to be like other girls of her age.

'I can easily find a job,' she told her father.

He bought her a very nice flat in Coleherne Court, Kensington, in the


centre of London. She asked a few friends to come and live with her - one
of them, Carolyn Pride, was an old schoolfriend of hers.

This was the beginning of a really happy time for Diana. She was
young and pretty. She had good friends - both boyfriends and girlfriends -
and a nice flat and a car. She was free to try and find her way in the world.

What could she do for a job? She loved children, and so she began to
look after babies and small children for her sisters' friends. Sometimes she
cleaned their houses too, or cooked meals for them. She studied cooking
again in London - she was good at Russian soup: but she and the girls in the
flat ate chocolate most of the time!

Then she found a job at the Young England School for little children.
Here she was very happy, and her bosses were very pleased with her work.
She was calm and kind with the children, and always gave them plenty of
love and hugs.

Soon there would be love in her life too - she would find her prince
and fill in love. She would become the new Princess of Wales. She didn't
know this, of course, but she did feel that she was getting ready for
something special. Diana went to parties, and she had a lot of friends, but
she was never serious about a man at that time.

'I had to keep myself tidy,' she said later, 'for what was coming.'
CHAPTER TWO

A Fairy-Tale Wedding

Prince Charles was taking a long time to choose a wife. He was


already 32. He always had plenty of girlfriends - Diana's sister, Sarah, was
once his girlfriend. But he couldn't decide who to marry. Charles was the
future King of Britain, so he had to choose well. Not every beautiful woman
makes a good queen. Life in the Royal Family can be very hard - the
'Royals' spend a lot of time in public. She must also be a girl from a good
family, and Charles must be her first lover.

In February 1981, the news finally came out that Prince Charles was
getting married - to Lady Diana Spencer. The photos in the newspapers
showed a pretty, quiet girl with a sweet smile, and the reporters soon began
to call her 'Shy Di'. Diana was the first English girl to marry a Prince of
Wales for five hundred years. And in private, Prince Charles said that the
Spencers were 'more royal than the Royals'! It seemed that Diana and
Charles were perfect together. People in Britain began to look forward to a
fairy-tale wedding.

Diana grew up with the Royal Family, but for a long time she didn't
really know Charles. There are a lot of families in the royal circle, and also
Charles was twelve years older than her. He was already a young man when
she was still a child. But when Diana was sixteen, they met at a country
house party. She was only a schoolgirl, and Charles was more interested in
his dog and his sport than in her. But from that time, Diana put a photo of
Charles by her bed.

They met at a few more parties, but it was only in July 1980 that
Charles began to look at Diana with new eyes. They were both staying with
friends in the country. In the evening, Diana sat next to Charles outside in
the garden. She was telling him that she saw him at a funeral a year earlier.
'You looked so sad,' she said. 'I thought, "It's wrong that you're alone -
you need someone to look after you."'

Charles's heart opened to her, and from then on he was seriously


interested in her. He asked her out for an evening of music, with supper
later at Buckingham Palace. But he didn't give Diana much time - she only
had twenty minutes to wash her hair and get ready!

'Maybe you'll be the next Queen of England!' a friend told her. Diana
only laughed.

Then Charles asked her to go to Balmoral for the Braemar Games, the
Scottish sports which happen every September. Diana's sister Jane was now
married to Robert Fellowes, the Queen's personal secretary. They had a
small house in the royal park at Balmoral, and Diana stayed there with her
sister and husband. Prince Charles phoned her every day, and they went for
walks together.

Until then, no one guessed that the Prince had a new girlfriend. But,
one day, Charles and Diana were fishing down by the River Dee. Suddenly
they noticed someone on the other side of the river. It was a reporter from a
newspaper looking for royal news. Diana quickly ran to hide behind some
trees, and used a mirror from her handbag to watch him. Two other
photographers hurried to the same place by the river. They were all very
excited, trying to see this new woman in Charles's life. Diana escaped from
them that day. But soon the reporters knew her name, and it was in all the
newspapers.

Now her life began to change. The public wanted to know all about
her, and paparazzi followed her everywhere. They followed her in her little
red Mini-Metro car. They phoned her in the middle of the night and waited
for her outside the Young England School. Even when she agreed to a
photograph, they still made trouble. The light was shining behind her skirt
and showed all of her long, beautiful legs! It was a very difficult time for a
shy young girl, and the Royal Family didn't help her. Even Charles was not
amused by the photograph. Diana began to understand that even famous
and popular people can be very much alone.
When Prince Charles finally asked her to marry him, in February
1981, she agreed. She arrived back at her flat very happy that night. Her
friends were waiting for her. They knew that it was something special!

Diana said, 'I've got news for you - but I must go to the toilet first!'

So they all knocked on the toilet door until she told them!

'I'm going to marry Prince Charles!' she called out, half laughing and
half-crying.

He gave her a beautiful blue ring, and they were ready now for the
photographs, the television recordings and the public appearances. Several
times, they had to answer the question, 'Are you in love?'

'Of course!' answered Diana.

But Charles was not so sure. His answer always seemed to be, 'Yes -
but what does that mean?'

To the public, it was real love. It was exciting news for Britain. Here
was a fairy-tale prince and princess, bringing new colour and life into the
Royal Family.

Diana now moved into Clarence House, the Queen Mother's home,
and was safer there from the reporters. Everyone was getting ready for the
wedding - over ten-thousand presents arrived for Charles and Diana! She
chose a young husband and wife, David and Elizabeth Emanuel, to make
her wedding dress.

'She made coffee for us,' they remembered. 'Here was the future
Princess of Wales, and we were students not so long ago. It was quite a
surprise.'

But not everything was perfect. At the centre of the fairy-tale, there
was a black shadow. When Charles asked Diana to marry him, something
strange happened. She suddenly felt, deep inside, that she would never be
Queen. She also knew that she would have a difficult job as Charles's wife.
This did not stop her. But, just before the wedding, she became
seriously worried. She suddenly understood that Charles's old girlfriend,
Camilla Parker-Bowles, was still very important to him. Diana found a
present from Charles to Camilla, and he often telephoned her. Did Charles
really love her, or was he still in love with Camilla?

And Diana was no longer free. The happy days in her flat with her
friends, and at work with the little children, were all gone. The 'royal
machine' frightened her. There were so many royal rules, and Buckingham
Palace was a 'dead' place to her. No one welcomed her when she arrived at
Clarence House, and no one told her how to do things.

She still tried to enjoy herself. She escaped to Australia for a quiet
holiday with her mother where none of the paparazzi could find them. Back
at Clarence House, she wanted to go on with her dancing, and so she asked
her old teacher to come and work with her. But she knew that soon nothing
would be the same. During one of her last lessons she said, 'In twelve days'
time, I shall no longer be me.'

She got thinner, and she even wanted to stop the wedding. Her sisters
told her to go on.

'Bad luck - you've got to do it! Your face is on the tea-towels now!'
they said.

So on 29 July 1981, Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer in St


Paul's Cathedral, London. It was a great day for England. More than a
million people were out on the streets in the morning to wave as she went
by. In Britain, everything stopped as people switched on the television. In
many houses there were little parties as families, friends and neighbours all
sat down together to enjoy themselves.

Diana arrived at St Paul's with her father. The church was full of
important people from all over the world. Not only was the British Royal
Family there, but there were other kings and queens from Europe. There
was beautiful music, and the church was full of flowers. Diana looked
wonderful in her long wedding dress, which was almost white, with the
skirt very long at the back. With flowers in her hands, and her heart full of
hope, she agreed to marry Charles.

'I will,' she said.

Charles put the wedding ring on her finger. It was made of Welsh
gold. This gold was a present to the Royal Family about fifty years earlier,
and Diana's ring was made of the very last piece.

Charles and Diana were now husband and wife. They promised to
stay together all their lives.

The crowds who were shouting 'Lady Di! Lady Di!' now changed the
words to 'Princess Di! Princess Di!'

They went back to Buckingham Palace, where Charles kissed his new
wife in public. Then they left for their wedding holiday, first at a house
called Broadlands, then on the royal ship, Britannia.

Diana was suddenly the world's favourite woman. Her face really was
on the tea-towels - and on cups, glasses, spoons, and all kinds of things that
people bought at the time of the Royal Wedding. They wanted something to
record and remember that special day, the most important royal day since
Elizabeth became Queen in June 1953.

In some ways, Queen Elizabeth was still part of a picture which was
painted by the famous Queen Victoria over a hundred years before. In this
picture, the Royal Family is a good Christian family. They show a polite
face in public, and keep all their problems secret. Royal children must learn
that their country comes first, and their personal life second. Sadly, this can
also give us a Royal Family which seems cold and far away.

Queen Elizabeth did try to make the Royal Family more modern.
Once, most royal children studied at home, but her son Prince Charles went
away to school and university. In the 1960s television cameras recorded her
home and her family life for the first time, so that people began to know the
Royal Family a little bit better. But, in the end, it was not enough for
modern times.
So could the fairy-tale marriage possibly have a happy ending? Did
Charles really love Diana when he married her? He probably tried to do his
best at the time, but it was difficult for him, too. In the past, kings and
princes married to make the Royal Family stronger and to have children.
Now Charles had to find the right wife for the Royal Family, and marry for
love. Could Diana be the perfect royal wife, when she was also a modern
girl? In 1981, we didn't ask ourselves these questions. We all wanted to
enjoy the fairy tale while we could.
CHAPTER THREE

The Young Princess

In her new marriage, Diana was like a young bird who was learning to
fly. At school, she was too shy to speak in public. Now she was making
public appearances all the time as one of the Royal Family. One of her first
public visits was in May just before she got married. This was to Tetbury, a
town near Prince Charles's new country home at Highgrove in
Gloucestershire. Crowds of people came out to see Diana. Dressed in a red
suit, she walked through the streets and smiled shyly as they gave her
bunches of flowers.

It took some time before she wasn't frightened of these public


appearances. On one of the first that she made with Prince Charles, he told
her to walk over to the waiting crowds.

'Talk to them,' he told her.

'I can't! I just can't!' she said.

But she had to, and after that, she found it became easier and easier.
She was very natural, and everyone liked that. People began to feel that
they could talk to her about their problems. She was quickly becoming one
of the most popular women in the world.

Soon she was more popular than Charles. He wasn't very pleased by
this.

'I'm sorry I'm not my wife,' he said once or twice to the crowds when
he made visits alone.

Everyone loved Diana because she was young and beautiful. During
her first few years as a princess, she learnt how to dress well, and people
became interested in her clothes. After every appearance, the reporters
described what she was wearing. There were photos in the newspapers
recording all her different dresses. Before she got married, she still looked
very young. Her face was round, and her clothes were nothing special. And
when she first became Princess of Wales, she still didn't always dress well.
Sometimes she wore dresses and hats that were too old for her, like those
for a 45-year-old woman.

Then she became the well-dressed Diana that we remember today.


She chose a lot of wonderful clothes - dinner dresses, dance dresses,
trousers, and suits. She learnt to dress for all kinds of different appearances
- for special visits, for sports, or for travel. For public appearances, she had
to wear clothes that were comfortable, as well as beautiful. She also had to
remember how her enemy, the wind, could blow those clothes about!

Diana began to buy from famous British clothes-makers, which


helped the clothes business in Britain. Some of her favourites were Bruce
Oldfield, Zandra Rhodes, and Catherine Walker. Sometimes she chose
bravely - a low-cut, short black dress, for example. But she could also look
like the perfect 'English rose' in a pink, well-cut suit, or a long white dance
dress. With her long legs, fair hair and wonderful smile, she could look
good in almost anything.

Then Diana became a mother too. Before the baby was born, she felt
sick a lot of the time. But she was healthy, and on 21 June 1982, she went
into St Mary's Hospital, London to have her baby. Charles stayed with her
there, and the Queen's private doctor looked after her. At 9.03 p.m., the new
prince was born. Crowds were waiting outside.

'Nice one, Charlie!' they shouted when they heard the news.

'He's got fair hair,' the proud father told them.

At first the new parents couldn't agree on names. Charles wanted to


call the baby Arthur, but Diana preferred William. On 3 August, in the
Music Room at Buckingham Palace, they gave their son the names William
Arthur Philip Louis.

Diana's first big public visit was to Australia, New Zealand and
Canada early in 1983. Usually, royal babies and small children stayed at
home when their parents went to other countries. When Prince Charles was
only a little boy, for example, his mother Queen Elizabeth went away for
several months. And when they finally met again, she only shook his hand.
Diana was a different kind of mother. She wanted to keep her children with
her, and to give them plenty of love. She wasn't afraid to hug and kiss them
in public.

So Charles and Diana took baby William with them. Great crowds
came out to see the Prince and Princess of Wales, and Diana quickly
became popular in those countries too. She was always ready to do what
people liked best - on her first visit to Wales, she spoke in Welsh. Then, in
New Zealand, she met a Maori woman, and touched noses to say 'Hello', in
the local way.

Soon another baby was coming, and on 15 September 1984 Prince


Harry was born. When the family was in London, they lived in a large flat
at Kensington Palace. It had four sitting- rooms, a dining-room, and four
bedrooms. Diana chose all the colours and the furniture, and tried to make it
a real family home.

Here she looked after her boys. She often played with them, and
helped them with their early lessons. But it was important that they met
other children too. Charles wanted William and Harry to study at home with
a private teacher, but Diana didn't agree. So in September 1985, William
went to his first school. In 1987, he went on to Wetherby School. On his
first day, she took him there just like any other mother, and together they
met his new teacher.

Diana was now a busy princess, wife and mother. But she was
beginning to work with charities now too, which quickly became one of the
most important things in her life. In 1982, the newspapers reported that
Diana was now working with five charities. By the time that she was 24,
she was working with eighteen. She began to visit people in hospital. She
wasn't afraid to meet people who were dying. And she began to meet people
with terrible illnesses like AIDS. A lot of people were frightened that you
could catch AIDS by touching someone; Diana held the hand of a man with
AIDS to show that this wasn't true. The photographs of this helped people
with AIDS a lot.
She worked hard, but she still wanted to have a good time too. She
practised a special dance secretly with the famous dancer, Wayne Sleep.
Then, one night at the theatre, she suddenly went up to the front to dance
with Wayne. She wanted to surprise Prince Charles! The newspapers were
full of it the next day. Only Prince Charles was not so pleased. In private, he
told her that it was not the right thing for a princess to do.

Diana now had a new friend in the Royal Family. This was Sarah
Ferguson, or 'Fergie', who married Prince Andrew, Charles's younger
brother, in 1986. She was a girl with a warm heart, but she wasn't always
sensible. One night, just before they got married, Prince Andrew was
having a 'men only' party.

'Fergie' and Diana dressed up as policewomen to try and get in!


Again, the Royal Family were not pleased with Diana. She was becoming
too wild...

Few people knew that at this time Diana was not happy. She seemed
to have the perfect life. But inside she was in trouble. She was helping other
people, but she needed help herself. She was popular, a great favourite of
the people, and reporters photographed her everywhere. But in private, she
was alone with her troubles.
CHAPTER FOUR

The Woman Inside

In November 1982, the Palace told the world that Diana was 'in the
best of health'. She did not have an eating illness, as some of the
newspapers were saying.

Diana began to look too thin even before she got married. People
thought that she was just tired, or growing up. But in fact, Diana was
getting ill. She ate too much, then made herself sick. She ate large meals out
of the refrigerator late at night. She ate cakes and chocolate, and was
sometimes sick several times a day. At first she looked thin because she
kept no food down inside her. But in the end, she learnt to hide her illness
so that she looked fine.

In January 1982, Diana fell down some stairs when her first baby was
on the way. It wasn't in the newspapers until a few weeks later. It was an
accident, the Palace said. It was only a few stairs. The doctor visited her and
she was fine now. There was nothing to worry about.

But Diana tried to kill herself that day. Life was too much for her. She
felt sick all the time before William was born, and her new 'job' in the Royal
Family was very difficult. Most of all, she felt that her husband wasn't
really interested in her. On that day, he wanted to go out horse-riding, and
he wouldn't stay to talk to her.

After William was born, she felt very unhappy. This happens to many
women, of course, for a short time after they have babies. But Diana got
worse, not better. She sometimes cut herself with a knife, and tried several
more times to kill herself. She was probably crying out for help. Outside,
she was still the perfect Princess of Wales, but inside, she was hurting.

Before Prince Harry was born, the hospital told Diana that the baby
was a boy. She didn't tell Charles. He really wanted a girl. When he first
saw their new son, he told her this. Suddenly Diana felt that this was the
end of their marriage.

'Something inside me died,' she told her friends later.

She married for love, but perhaps Charles didn't. Did his family push
him into the marriage? His real love, Camilla Parker- Bowles, was already
married, and he had to marry someone. Perhaps he chose Diana only
because she would be the right sort of royal wife and mother.

Charles was still seeing Camilla when he was married to Diana. On


their wedding holiday, Diana saw that Charles still kept photos of Camilla
in his pocket. And during the marriage, Charles still gave Camilla presents,
and often telephoned her privately.

The mother of Camilla's grandmother also had a royal lover, King


Edward VII. Camilla, it seemed, was repeating the family story. But Charles
and Camilla were friends, as well as lovers. They were the same age, and
they were interested in the same filings, like horses and the country. Many
women did not find Charles an easy man, but Camilla seemed to understand
him well. Earlier, a lot of his girlfriends got tired of him. He could be warm
one day, and cold the next. He spent time with them, then disappeared for a
long time. Even Camilla stopped waiting for him when she was young. She
married another man, Andrew Parker-Bowles.

Charles and Diana were different ages, and they liked different things.
He wanted to read books on their wedding holiday; Diana wanted to enjoy
the sun and the sea. He wanted to talk about serious ideas, when she wanted
to give everything to their new love. It was soon clear to them both that
they thought and felt very differently.

In public, they were still husband and wife, but in private they were
sleeping in separate bedrooms. People were beginning to see that all was
not well. In Canada in 1986, Diana fell down in public because she was so
ill and unhappy. The same year, Prince Charles came home early from their
holiday in Majorca. Then, in 1987, he went up to Balmoral alone for a
month. He told the reporters that he had a lot of work to do there.
Diana was working hard for the Royal Family and the country, but she
was still very unsure of herself. She was always waiting for Charles and the
Royal Family to say 'Well done!' They never did. But in 1988, life began to
change for her. She found that she could be strong.

A terrible accident happened when she and Charles were on holiday


in Switzerland with a group of friends. Snow came down from the
mountains and killed Hugh Lindsay, one of their best friends. Diana was in
bed with a cold at the time. One of Charles's secretaries arrived back at the
house with the terrible news.

Diana decided what she needed to do. She put all Lindsay's clothes
into his suitcase. She and Charles flew back to England with the body. Then
Diana looked after Hugh Lindsay's wife, Sarah. The Lindsays only got
married a few months before the holiday, and Sarah was having a baby.

And then Diana decided that it was time to help herself, too. Carolyn,
her old schoolfriend, said, 'I'll give you an hour. If you don't go to a doctor,
I'll tell the world about your illness!'

Diana went to see a special doctor for help with her eating illness.

'How many times have you tried to kill yourself?' he asked her at
once.

'Four or five times,' she said. She was very surprised that he seemed
to know all about her so quickly.

In six months' time, he told her, she could be a new person. He visited
her every week, and she began to read books about the illness and to
understand herself better. In six months, she was a new person, and she was
almost better.

It was the beginning of a new way of life for her. She had to help
herself; Charles wouldn't help her. He didn't love her as she wanted. And he
never would.
She also learnt to give her love to the poor and ill people that she met
through her charity work. She had a special touch. When she visited people
in hospital, a hug or a kiss from Diana seemed to help them greatly.
Sometimes she continued to visit people for a long time until they were
better. She often wrote them kind letters later. A lot of her charity work was
with children, and she was always happy and natural with them.

At home, it was the beginning of the war between Diana and the
Royal Family. It was difficult for people who worked for Charles and
Diana. They had to decide which side they were on. You had to be a
'Charles person' or a 'Diana person'. If you tried to be both, you quickly got
into trouble. Diana began to think of 'Charles's people' as 'the enemy.'

They now lived two separate lives in the family too. There was
Diana's life, and Charles's life. This was true even for the boys. When Diana
took them out, they went to modern places that children like - water game
parks or the cinema. They usually wore ordinary clothes like jeans and T-
shirts. With Charles, they wore more grown-up clothes, and did country
things that he enjoyed, like fishing.

The public began to think worse of Charles when Prince William had
a serious accident at school in 1991. Diana stayed at the hospital with him
all night but Charles went off to the theatre.

'How could he do that?' people asked. 'What sort of a father is he?'

Charles loved his sons too, but perhaps he didn't understand how to
show it. He did try to do better after that, but many people were beginning
to prefer Diana.

But not everyone. 'She's ill,' some people were saying. 'She needs to
be in hospital.' Or: 'She's trying to hurt the Royal Family. They must stop
her!'

Diana was beginning to make a new life for herself. It was difficult,
and she was often unhappy, but it was the only way out.
CHAPTER FIVE

The New Diana

The Queen called 1992 a 'terrible year'. It began badly for Diana, too.
On 29 March, her much-loved father died. She was on holiday in Austria,
and she flew home at once for the funeral. Prince Charles flew back with
her to England, but she went to the funeral alone. The newspapers, of
course, were quick to notice this.

It was a month for royal stories. The Palace told the world that the
marriage of Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson was over.

Then a new book came out about Princess Diana: Diana - Her True
Story by Andrew Morton. The book talked about Diana's eating illness, and
about how unhappy she was with Prince Charles and the Royal Family. It
also talked about Prince Charles and Camilla Parker-Bowles. At first,
everyone was very surprised. Could it all be true? In the end, people
realised that most of it was Diana's real story.

But there was another surprise coming for her - and an unpleasant
one. Diana was beginning, secretly, to look for a new love in her life. She
had to be very careful, because she and Charles were still married. The
world would not think well of a royal mother with other lovers. Then
suddenly, recordings of secret phone calls between Diana and James Gilbey
came out. Gilbey was an old friend of Diana's, but here they were talking as
lovers. Someone recorded the conversations, the newspapers said, two years
earlier.

In them, Gilbey uses a special name for Diana - 'Squidgy'. He asks


Diana to kiss him down the phone, and says, 'Oh Squidgy, I love you, love
you, love you!'

Another lover was James Hewitt, the man who taught Diana to ride
again - she was still afraid of horses after her accident as a child. Will
Carling, the sportsman, and his wife ended their marriage because of Diana.
Then there was Oliver Hoare, who sold paintings. Someone began to make
silent phone calls to his home; perhaps it was Diana, unhappy because
Oliver didn't want to talk to her. We will probably never know everything
about her life at this time, but it's clear that she was seeing other men.

Then in 1993 recordings of phone, conversations between Charles and


Camilla appeared, and everyone now knew for sure that they were lovers.
Charles was very unhappy about this, and at first promised to live alone
without women. A year later, he talked about it all on television. But he
didn't stop seeing Camilla.

In the photos of 1992, Diana is often alone. In one, she is sitting in


front of the Taj Mahal in India. She is smiling, but she looks very small and
alone in front of the big white building. In November 1992, Charles and
Diana did make a visit together to Korea, but they were clearly unhappy.
Finally, in December they told the public that they were separating. Prince
Charles would stay at Highgrove, and Diana would live alone at Kensington
Palace. The children would spend time with both of their parents.

The Queen's family was in trouble all around her. Just to finish the
terrible story of 1992, there was a serious fire at Windsor Castle, the
Queen's favourite home. Everyone there, the Queen too, worked hard to put
it out. But the Castle and the Royal Family would never be the same again.

Diana's private rooms at Kensington Palace were full of photos of


William and Harry.

'They mean everything to me,' she said. But now she couldn't be with
them so much. A lot of the time, they were at school or with their father.
She even had to eat her Christmas dinner alone while William and Harry
spent Christmas day with their father and grandmother.

But she was doing her best to help her sons for their future as royal
princes, and William perhaps as the future King of England. She decided
that they needed to understand some of the country's problems. She took
them to visit sick people in hospitals. But she also took them out secretly to
see some of the dark and unpleasant places where homeless people spend
the night. In 1995, William went to Eton, one of the top schools in the
country, but he didn't forget the other side of life that Diana showed him. He
later gave Diana the idea of selling a lot of her dresses for charity.

Diana's new life had good times in it, too. She had plenty of friends.
Many of them were famous, and some of them were filmstars or popstars.
She was friendly with the popstars Elton John and George Michael, and
with Terence Stamp and Richard Attenborough, the filmstars. She knew
Luciano Pavarotti, the Italian singer, and others from the music and film
world, like Michael Jackson, Paul and Linda McCartney, and Liza Minelli.
She often had lunch with friends. An Italian restaurant, San Lorenzo in
Kensington was her favourite for a long time. She still loved dancing and
pop music, and she went swimming or running every day to keep in good
shape. Diana was very serious about her health now.

But she couldn't escape from the paparazzi. Everywhere she went,
they tried to take photographs of her. Sometimes they took photos secretly -
you could get a lot of money for a new photo of Diana.

Suddenly, it was all too much for her. In December 1993, she told the
world that she wanted to live quietly. She would stop most of her work for
charities. She needed time for her children, and for her private life.

It was not for long. She soon came back because she wanted to get on
with her work, and be 'a mother to the world', as one newspaper wrote. And
the story of Diana and Charles was not over yet; in November 1995 she
recorded her famous appearance on television.

She talked openly to reporter Martin Bashir about her life in the Royal
Family, and she was clearly hurt and angry about the past.

'There were three in this marriage,' she said about Charles and
Camilla. And three, as she told us, is a crowd.

But she also talked about her future. 'I don't think many people will
want me to be Queen... because I do things differently, because I don't go by
a rule book.' She worked, she said, 'from the heart, not the head'. But she
wanted 'to be Queen of people's hearts'. These were words which the world
never forgot.

A lot of people that she helped will never forget her either. One of her
favourite charities was Centrepoint, which looks after homeless people.
Vincent Seabrook, a man of 27 now working as a private guard, remembers
her well. He was living homeless on the streets when Diana came past and
stopped to talk to him.

'She got me something to eat and drink, listened to me, and gave me
the number for Centrepoint,' he said.

She wasn't frightened of illness, or of people who had serious


problems with their bodies. She was ready with a hug or a kiss for
everyone.

A man who couldn't see wanted to know what Diana was like. 'Is it all
right if I touch your face?' he asked.

'Of course you can,' she said.

He moved his hands over her eyes, nose and mouth until he could see
a picture of her in his head.

'You're very pretty!' he said.

When someone was in trouble, she tried to help them. Once in


hospital, she heard a woman crying. The woman's son, Dean, was badly
hurt in a car accident. Diana sat with the young man that night, and visited
him again later. She even went to his house when he was better, and met his
children.

'What shall we call you?' they all asked.

'Just Diana,' she said.

She often visited children's hospitals like Great Ormond Street


Hospital for Sick Children. Victoria Hemphill, a young girl with a serious
heart problem, felt that the Princess was her special friend, and kept photos
of Diana by her bed. Diana often talked to her about William and Harry, and
the boys wrote to her. 'Dearest Victoria, I wanted to send you lots of love
while you were in hospital,' began a letter from Prince Harry.

Diana had time for her friends who were in trouble, too. She helped a
friend called Rosa when her baby died, and gave time to another friend,
Cosima, when her marriage ended. She knew what it was like to feel hurt
inside.

She still travelled to other countries. In 1994 she visited Zimbabwe, in


Africa. Photos show that she helped to give out lunch to children in a
special school. She visited hospitals in Pakistan. In India, she became
friends with Mother Teresa, who was famous for her work with poor people
who were dying on the streets.

Diana once said, 'I'm not frightened of dying, if I can die happy.'
CHAPTER SIX

Her Last Days

After Diana's marriage finally ended in August 1996, she was a rich
woman with over 17 million pounds. But she wanted to go on working. She
specially wanted to stop the use of landmines. She visited Angola and
Bosnia, where there are still terrible problems with landmines after the wars
there. She met people who lost legs or arms from these landmines - not only
men, but little children too. When she spoke out against the landmines, not
everyone agreed with her. But Diana was still ready to speak from the heart.

She had a good summer in 1997. She visited her brother, Charles, in
South Africa. She spent her birthday there, and enjoyed a holiday with
Charles and his family without any of the usual trouble from the paparazzi.

There was only one sad time in the middle of July, when she went to
Italy for the funeral of her friend Gianni Versace, the famous clothes-maker.

Something very special was happening in Diana's life that summer


too. She had a new boyfriend. This was Dodi Al Fayed, a film-maker, who
was 42. The Al Fayeds are a Moslem family from Egypt, but they live in
England. They are very rich; the famous London shop, Harrods, and the
Ritz Hotel in Paris belong to Mohammed Al Fayed, Dodi's father.

The Al Fayed family and the Spencer family were already friends.
Diana first met Dodi about ten years earlier, but they didn't become good
friends until she went on holiday to France with the Al Fayed family in July
1997. Harry and William went too, and they all had a wonderful time. It
was the best holiday for years, Diana said later. And soon Diana and Dodi
became more than friends; they fell in love.

They went away on holiday again at the end of that month, but they
were alone together this time. They visited Corsica and Sardinia in the Al
Fayeds' private boat. The paparazzi soon knew that they were lovers. And
then, of course, they all wanted to get pictures and stories of Diana and
Dodi. The man who took the first photos of their kisses sold the pictures for
a million dollars.

On 21 August, Diana flew back to France again to start a third holiday


with Dodi. By now, they were deeply in love. He gave her presents, and it's
possible that they planned to get married. Dodi was married before, and had
a lot of girlfriends after that. But he was very serious about Diana.

This third holiday ended suddenly because of the paparazzi. When


their boat arrived at Sardinia, the photographers ran after Dodi and Diana
everywhere. They even found them at a hotel where they were staying
secretly. That was enough - the lovers decided to leave at once for Paris.

They arrived on Saturday, 30 August. Dodi had a small home in Paris,


which they tried to use secretly. During the afternoon, Dodi went out to get
a very expensive ring which he was buying as a present for Diana. It was a
ring that she would never wear.

The paparazzi knew Diana and Dodi were now in Paris and were
following them again. They planned to eat dinner at a restaurant in the city
centre, but decided that it wasn't safe there. They went on to the Ritz, the
hotel which belongs to Dodi's father. When they arrived at the Ritz, there
were already about 40 paparazzi waiting for them.

At last, just after midnight, they left the hotel by the back door to go
back to Dodi's house. They were trying to escape, and sent off another car
from the front. But some of the paparazzi saw Diana and Dodi as they drove
off in their special Mercedes car with their driver and bodyguard.

'You won't catch me!' said the driver, Henri Paul, as he drove faster
and faster; so did the paparazzi, some in cars, and several on very fast bikes.
There were cameras and lights everywhere, as they tried to photograph
Diana's car.

When the road came to the River Seine, it went underground.


The car was now travelling very fast - perhaps at over 160 km an
hour. It hit a wall. The crash killed Dodi and the driver at once. The
bodyguard, Trevor Rees-Jones, was still alive. So was Diana - but she was
very badly hurt.

It took more than an hour before they could get her out of the crashed
car. They took her to hospital, where doctors tried to save her life. But it
was no good. She died at about four o'clock in the morning.

Soon telephones were ringing in Britain as people heard the news and
phoned to tell their friends and families. Some heard it on the television or
radio at the end of a long night's work, and it seemed that it couldn't
possibly be true.

At Balmoral, Prince Charles woke his sons William and Harry to tell
them the terrible news. That afternoon, Charles left Scotland by plane with
Diana's two sisters Sarah and Jane. They flew to Paris together to bring her
body home.

During the week, newspapers, television and radio were full of


Diana's sad story. People cried and left bunches of flowers for her. By the
middle of the first day, there were over a thousand bunches outside
Kensington Palace. By the end of the week, it was like a sea of flowers
there. With the flowers there were cards and letters: 'To our sweet Princess -
Thank you for the love you showed us all.' 'Queen of Hearts' and 'Princess
of Love' were words that came up again and again. 'We'll never forget you,'
the letters said.

And during that week, the mystery about the car crash was growing.
When Trevor Rees-Jones, the bodyguard, finally woke up in hospital, he
couldn't remember the accident. We now know that the driver, Henri Paul,
had too much to drink that evening - far too much. But the paparazzi were
driving too fast and too near, and the photographers' lights were too bright.
Did they make it happen, too? And was there a second car in the crash?
Some people even thought that it was murder. This was probably just a wild
story, but there was still a mystery about the crash.
Diana's funeral was on Saturday, 6 September 1997, one week after
she died. On Friday night, thousands of people went to London. They
stayed out all night, waiting for the morning, when her body would travel
from Kensington Palace to Westminster Abbey. Kensington Palace Gardens
were beautiful. It was a warm night, and there were flowers by every tree.
People of all ages sat quietly together in little groups, remembering Diana.

Her funeral, like her wedding, brought famous people together from
all over the world. Some were heads of governments, and others were her
friends. Many were famous names from the worlds of film and music. All
the Royal Family was there. Princes Charles, William and Harry walked
behind Diana's body as it went into the church. Her sons gave her white
flowers with a card that just said, 'Mummy'. In Hyde Park, crowds of
thousands watched the funeral on a big screen. Many cried as they listened
to the words, and heard some of Diana's favourite music.

Earlier that summer, Diana looked after her friend Elton John at
Gianni Versace's funeral. Now he sang at her funeral. It was a song that he
once wrote about the film star, Marilyn Monroe. Marilyn and Diana were
both 36 when they died. Elton changed the words for Diana.

'Goodbye England's rose,' he sang. She would always 'grow in our


hearts'.

Then her brother, Charles, spoke about Diana. He remembered how


kind and beautiful she was.

'Today is our chance to say thank you... We want you to know that life
without you is very, very difficult.'

He was very angry with the paparazzi who gave her such a hard time.
And he promised to try and help her sons in their future life.

The funeral car took Diana's body to the Spencer family home at
Althorp, in Northamptonshire. People threw flowers in front of the car as it
went past. At first, her family planned to bring her to the local church at
Althorp, but then they decided against this. Thousands of visitors could
make life too difficult for the small village. So, finally, they took Diana to a
small island in a lake in the gardens of Althorp Park. Here her body lies in
private, but once every year, visitors can come to see the place where she
rests.

Diana's life is over, but her story is not. The way that she lived and
died will change many things. Her life showed a new road for the Royal
Family to take. She showed them a way to be nearer to the British people
and to help with real problems in the modern world. When she died, we all
remembered that life can be very short. Every one of us has to do our best
with the time that we have.

'It's important to show love,' said Diana.

We need to remember this too.

- THE END -

Hope you have enjoyed the reading!

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