Princess Diana's cook: "The enmity between William and Harry started because of eating sausage"

The late Princess Diana's cook, Paul Burrell, 64, said Prince Harry was bothered by the fact that his brother William was eating more sausage than him, and suggested it was a clue to the dynamic competitiveness between the two princes.

According to the newspaper "The Mirror" Burrell said that Harry was saying: "How does William take three more pieces than he has at the dinner table?", Then the nanny would reply to him, saying: "William needs more food than you. And he will be king one day." .

Pearl believes that these types of remarks sparked tensions between the brothers early on.

He said: "Looking back, I think I would have noticed this dynamic between the two brothers. One time I saw the nanny giving William three sausages for breakfast and Harry two. Then Harry looked at his plate and said how come you give him three when I only have two?"

Burrell believes that much of Harry's recent behavior comes from his feeling during his growth with his brother that he is constantly the second number after William, and added that Diana asked her husband Charles not to send Harry to Eton School, for fear that he would continue to be compared to his older brother who studied at another school, But his father did not care about her words.

Burrell claimed that Harry addressed the problem of rivalry with his brother by becoming a louder and noisier person, and added that they had always asked Harry to be quiet due to his behavior during his childhood, according to what he told the newspaper "The Sun".

Burrell remembers an incident when William got angry and said he didn't want to be king, so Harry noticed him and said, "I'll be in his place. Diana laughed and said that's funny. You're going to be a funny king, Harry."

Although Burrell sympathized with Harry given his difficult childhood experiences, he believed he had been so critical of his family that he no longer knew him.

Harry's diary book titled "The Reserve" became the fastest selling book in history, selling 1.43 million copies within the first day of its release in the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada, which is twice the previous record achieved by former US President Barack Obama's book titled The Promised Land, which sold 887,000 copies on the first day of its release.

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