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Princess Diana ‘could read children’s hearts’

Princess Diana had a “talent for reading children’s hearts”.

Lady Eliza Spencer – the niece of the late Princess – has heaped praise on Diana, recalling her “warm, maternal and loving” personality.

The 28-year-old twin – who spent her early years at Althorp, Diana’s final resting place, before relocating to South Africa – said: “We always just knew her as our aunt.

“Growing up in South Africa, I really had very little idea of how significant she was in the world until I was much older.”

Eliza thinks the Princess – who died in August 1997, aged 36 – created a real connection with children.

She told Tatler magazine: “She always made an effort to connect with us as children and had a talent for reading children’s hearts.”

Eliza – whose father is Earl Spencer, Diana’s brother – admitted she didn’t grasp the scale of the Princess’ fame during her younger years.

She confessed: “As a child, I realised the enormity of the loss for my father and family.”

It was only later that I came to understand the significance of the loss of her as a figure in the world.”

Prince William previously admitted to being “in a state of shock for many years” after Diana’s death.

Asked if he grieved her death, the 38-year-old royal replied: “Probably not properly. I was in a state of shock for many years.”

Asked if he literally meant that it took “years” to come to terms with Diana’s death, Prince William added: “Yes, absolutely. 

“People might find that weird, or think of shock as something that is there, it hits you, then in an hour or two, maybe a day or two, you are over it. 

“Not when it is this big a deal; when you lose something so significant in your life, so central, I think the shock lasts for many years.”