The Daily Telegraph

Desk where Diana wrote intimate letters on display

Personal items of Princess selected by her sons will feature in Buckingham Palace exhibition

- By Patrick Sawer

IT WAS where she poured out her deepest hopes and fears in letters to friends and confidante­s. Now, two decades on, the public can view the desk at which Diana, Princess of Wales, not only carried out her official work, but also sought solace from her troubled personal life.

The desk was chosen by Princes William and Harry for inclusion in a new exhibition at Buckingham Palace as a way of paying tribute to their mother’s memory.

The Duke of Cambridge and his brother selected the items displayed on the desk to remember Diana’s “commitment to duty”, as well as the time they spent with her as children at Kensington Palace. The items include her ballet shoes, which she used to hang on the door of her sitting room at Kensington Palace; a wooden tuck box bearing the name “D Spencer”, which she had at boarding school; and cassette albums by Diana Ross, Elton John and George Michael, as well as opera and piano concertos.

The desk – originally sited in her study at the palace – was used by the princess to conduct her official business, including reading briefing notes and official correspond­ence, and it was also where she expressed her emotional turmoil following the collapse of her marriage to the Prince of Wales.

In Oct 1993, 10 months after her separation from Prince Charles was announced, Diana penned a note to her butler, Paul Burrell, in which she expressed her fear and suspicions about her estranged husband’s plans for her.

She wrote “I am sitting here at my desk today in October, longing for someone to hug me and encourage me to keep strong and hold my head high.

“This particular phase in my life is the most dangerous – my husband is planning ‘an accident’ in my car, brake failure and serious head injury in order to make the path clear for him to marry Tiggy [Alexandra Legge-bourke, the nanny to William and Harry]. Camilla is nothing but a decoy, so we are all being used by the man in every sense of the word.”

The letter was shown at the inquest into her death in Dec 2007 – 10 years on from the high speed crash in a Paris underpass that ended her life – after some witnesses denied Diana had expressed fears for her safety. The desk goes on display tomorrow in the Music Room at Buckingham Palace, one of the State Rooms open to the public during the summer.

Also on display are dozens of gifts bestowed on the Queen, including jewellery and porcelain as well as ornate craft products from numerous Commonweal­th countries.

The Summer Opening of the State Rooms at Buckingham Palace, including the special exhibition Royal Gifts and the tribute to Diana, Princess of Wales, will run from July 22 to Oct 1.

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