Valentine Princess Diana - Symbol of Love!

jayanti raman
Princess Diana is the true symbol of Love, affection, tender feelings towards others, a heartthrob of millions, most beautiful & pretty women, true and a rare beauty, mother of two beautiful princes and a true symbol of Valentine. As a writer it is my privilege and honor to write few words on her.

Many writers have written tons of articles on Princess Diana, but I have decided to show her Valentine side and her love towards other human beings.

Some facts of Princess Diana

Valentine Princess Diana was born on 1st July 1961 ,Park House,Sandringham, Norfolk, England.

She is also well known as Princess of Wales Diana, Lady Diana Spencer, Diana Princess of Wales , Their Royal Highnesses The Prince and Princess of Wales , Princess Diana Spencer Windsor .

The world was and always will be enamored by the charm and beauty of the late Princess. She came from a distinguished and privileged family being the youngest daughter of Edward Spencer, Viscount Althorp and Frances Spencer. Diana's ancestry is all smeared in royal blood. She was descended from King Charles II and King James II, all through illegitimate sons and daughters. Lady Diana a below average student was educated at Riddlesworth Hall which was an all girls school in Norfolk and then briefly attended an expensive finishing school in Rougemont, Switzerland. It was here that she got a glimpse of her future husband who was dating her elder sister. However there were two areas where Diana excelled, one was singing, the other was sports

Her marriage was like a fairytale dream come true; she married most handsome and eligible bachelor, the eldest son of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip. Prince Charles and Princess Diana became man and wife in July, 1981.She came with all love and affection of the whole world which bestowed to the royal family.

Social work
She was always for the people; her social work was exception, with her time royal family as well as other celebrities. She took special interest on outclassed, of society and showed how little separates fortune from misfortune. No matter that she had, through the years, transformed into a sleek, stylish icon, a paragon of grace and beauty rivaled by no other. She was still out there, crusading to eliminate land mines, comforting land mine victims in Angola, shaking the hands of AIDS patients before it was posh to do so.

There is a picture in the commemorative issue of Newsweek that captures Diana's generosity better than my words ever could. In it, Princess Diana hugs an 11-year-old Chicago girl upon the girl's release from a hospital. But Diana does not just hug her; she clutches her with both arms, her brows furrowed in concern and compassion. She presses her face against the girl's, squishing the girl's nose and mouth against her cheek. If the picture were at a better angle, we could probably see the tears that her gesture implies. It makes my heart hurt, because there are no lines between royalty and common folk here, no evidence of the Most Watched Woman in the World paying her respects to an invalid -just a mother hugging a child who is not even her own. You would never guess that the mother was Princess Diana.
This shows her rare sensitivity towards her fellow human beings, inspite her marriage gone to doldrums.

As a mother she was always for the children, but death separated her from own children.

The Valentine Princess Diana's story of a woman who was too perfect to be human, too human to be perfect, and too young to have died so soon.

It is about a woman who was twice-wronged, robbed first of a life of privilege by the royal family, and then robbed of life itself by an intoxicated French security guard outrunning paparazzi during what should have been a five-minute car ride.

But only in death can Diana cement her role as a symbol of modernity in an otherwise antiquated monarchy, her role as a cultural emblem of humanitarianism and peace in a world ravaged by pestilence and inequality.

In true sense Valentine Princess Diana was a Symbol of Love!

Published by jayanti raman

Author has 17+ years of experence in Marketing lighting group products and has vast experence in lighting design. He is working as Article marketer and ghost writer.Now successful Internet based Home busi...  View profile

12 Comments

Post a Comment
  • Diane Dilov-Schultheis2/8/2009

    GREAT article. She truly WAS a special soul!

  • Jennie Bond1/27/2009

    If you wish to be taken seriously as a writer I suggest you formulate balanced pieces, carrying out extensive research on your subject beforehand.

    As for other contributors to this page, I seriously doubt you ever met Diana during her life, so you are hardly a credible source for comment.

    Jennie Bond, former Royal Correspondent, BBC News

  • Jennie Bond1/27/2009

    Jayamti, I deduce from your piece you have a very sincere admiration for the late princess, which is endearing.

    However, this article is riddled with inaccuracies.

    Where do I begin?

    Diana was never "well known" as 'Princess Diana Spencer Windsor', or even 'Princess Diana'.

    Born the Hon. Diana Spencer (the daughter of a courtesy viscount), later the Lady Diana Spencer (when her father succeeded to the Spencer earldom).

    Upon marriage she was styled HRH the Princess of Wales. When her marriage to the Prince of Wales ended she retained the style of a divorced wife of a peer - Diana, Princess of Wales.

    Diana was not a princess of royal blood and therefore never entitled to be styled as Princess Diana. If anything, she would have been referred to as the Princess Charles (which was never the case).

    During her marriage she was also the Duchess of Rothesay (an ancient Scottish title), Duchess of Cornwall and Countess of Chester.

    If you wish to be taken serious

  • mayka1/7/2009

    She was indeed a wonderful person!

  • Kerry Hosking1/4/2009

    ..and look at mine...lol TYPO!

  • Kerry Hosking1/4/2009

    thank you for this. Prncess Di was a very special person to billions of people. She will alsways be deeply missed. Great writing:)

  • Beatrice Dupree1/3/2009

    Dear Jayamti,
    It is better said if I say, " Princess Diana was on the verge of an even more special life if given the space she required to do so."

    Beatrice DuPree

  • Beatrice DuPree1/3/2009

    Dear Jayamti,
    Princess Diana was on the verge of a even
    more special life.

    Keep writing,
    Beatrice Dupree

  • 3lilangels1/3/2009

    what a very beautiful read, she was a great woman!

  • Cathy A Montville1/2/2009

    This is a special article! I adored Princess Di and felt so sorry for all she went through trying to keep to the standards of the family she married into! Awesome read and tribute to a beautiful lady!

Displaying Comments
Next »

To comment, please sign in to your Yahoo! account, or sign up for a new account.