Harry cut into his memoir, fearing he would not be forgiven

Prince Harry has removed many passages from his memoirs, fearing that his father Charles III and his brother William would never ‘forgive’ him certain embarrassing revelations, he claimed in an interview with the Telegraph published on Friday.

‘The first (book) project was different. It was 800 pages, and now it’s only 400. It might have been two books, put like that. And the hardest part was removing things,’ he told The Telegraph newspaper.

‘There are things that have happened, especially between me and my brother, and to some extent between me and my father, that I just don’t want the world to know regarding. Because I don’t think they would ever forgive me,” he added.

The book entitled ‘Le Suppléant’ got off to a flying start in bookshops. The youngest son of Charles III spares no one, especially not his brother, two years older than him, whom he describes as ‘the best enemy’.

Presented as angry, William would never have liked his wife Meghan, whom he considered ‘badly brought up and aggressive’, and would have during an argument in 2019 thrown Harry to the ground in the dog bowl.

Worried regarding his nephews

In the interview, conducted before the release of the book in California where he lives, Harry also explains that he feels responsible for William’s children: George, 9, Charlotte, 7, and Louis, 4.

“I know out of those three kids, at least one will end up like me, the alternate,” he said. “And it hurts me, it worries me,” he added, admitting that William had “made it very clear to him that his children are not my responsibility”.

“It’s not regarding trying to bring down the monarchy – it’s regarding trying to save them from themselves,” he said. “I know that I will be crucified by many people saying this,” he admitted, repeating all the same to hope for a reconciliation.

He also speaks directly to the royal family asking them to apologize to his wife Meghan, ‘because you know what you have done’.

‘Then confess and we can all move on,’ he adds. Buckingham Palace has been silent since the release of the mischievous book ahead of Charles III’s coronation on May 6.

/ATS

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