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Maung Dee - Princess Diana (Library Series-84)

Maung Dee - Princess Diana (Library Series-84)

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Gift of speech 

The key collection is a library program that aims to encourage readers, especially young people, to develop a reading culture. The 21st century is defined as an era of technology, knowledge, and skills, and the library is working to the best of its ability to develop a reading culture for each and every young person and the entire nation.

The most effective way to convey the intellectual and cultural heritage of humanity that has been passed down for thousands of years is through books. In the words of Saya Zaw Gyi, libraries can be said to be workshops for human knowledge. Anyone who wants to improve their lives, anyone who wants to be a better person, anyone who wants to be a better person, must read. A nation that does not read, a country that does not have a reading culture, will be left behind in everything.

Let me reiterate that the key collection is working to promote the reading culture by organizing the key collection library series.

The key collection library series will strive to select, organize, and publish books that are worth reading and that meet the needs of individual reading development, private libraries, basic education school libraries, and public libraries . Let me give a gift to readers.

the key collection

Princess Diana

July 29, 1981, was a public holiday in England. The thirty-two-year-old heir to the British throne, Prince Charles, was engaged to Lady Diana Frances Spencer in the “wedding of the century.” Thousands of people lined the streets of London. A third of a billion people watched the ceremony on television.

The crowd cheered as the twenty-year-old Diana stepped out of a horse-drawn carriage known as the Glass Carriage in front of St. Paul's Cathedral in London.

Diana wore a dazzling crown of gold and diamonds and a beautiful white dress.

The back of the dress was twenty-five feet long. Diana, the future princess, walked into the cathedral on the arm of her proud father, Earl John Spencer. Thirty-five thousand guests stood and watched as the living Cinderella walked down the red carpet. Charles's mother, Queen Elizabeth II of England, and her father, Prince Philip, watched in awe.

Maung Di Princess Diana Library Series 842

Standing at the front of the prayer platform was Prince Charles. Charles was dressed in a navy blue lieutenant colonel's suit and had his wavy hair neatly combed. The handsome prince, who could marry any beautiful woman, had chosen Diana as his best man.

“I couldn't take my eyes off him,” Diana later said. “I really thought he was the luckiest girl in the world.

The royal wedding was about to begin. The Archbishop of Canterbury, who presided over the ceremony, recalled that the day was “like a fairy tale setting.”

Most fairy tales end with a "happily ever after" ending. However, the princess's real life is much more complicated.

In the years since her wedding, Diana has sometimes felt lonely and heartbroken. It hasn't always been the storybook happiness she had imagined. But on her wedding day, watched by the world, Diana was a happy bride. She couldn't wait to tie the knot with her handsome prince.

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