Daily Mail

Should Wills and Harry discuss their grief publicly?

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ALL this public boo-hooing by the young Princes is such an embarrassm­ent and not at all like the quiet, calm and unassuming behaviour of the Queen. Can we please have an end to all this soul-baring? Let us look towards the future, not wallow in the past.

Mrs IRIS DAINTON, Louth, Lincs. ROYALS should maintain their air of mystery and by and large they do. Death, however, is a great leveller and the loss of your mother is something most people will have to face in life. William and Harry have shown that regardless of status, they are not exempt from the emotions felt by anyone else suffering such loss. It is also evidence of how important their mother’s influence has been in their lives and their determinat­ion to keep her memory and all she stood for alive.

DIANE SILVA, Lytham St Annes, Lancs.

PEOPLE seem to forget Princes William and Harry are grown up and can figure out for themselves what happened and why to their beloved mother. Maybe they have had enough of her being airbrushed. Sorry to say it, but Prince Charles’s chickens are coming home to roost.

JOANNA BARTON, Walkford, Dorset. DIANA died 20 years ago. Do you think we might be able to move on any time soon? PAUL GILLIGAN, Doncaster.

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