If she has ever struggled, she hasn’t complained. It’s a life too luxurious to be described as hard, but the history of royal spouses – from a wronged Diana to a once-vilified Camilla, and lately Meghan saying she has had suicidal thoughts – suggests it isn’t easy, either. She can compete playfully with her husband at things that don’t matter, like spin bike challenges in Welsh leisure centres, but not eclipse him. She can’t have a career in the conventional sense, but also can’t be seen to do nothing with her days. She must be just interesting enough to feed the media beast, but never so interesting as to be divisive. When she married her prince at 29, the then Kate Middleton chose a gilded but perilously narrow path. It has been, as royal evolutions are, a slow process. At 41, the princess once dismissed by some as a glorified clothes horse is emerging as a more substantial figure on whom a monarchy rocked by scandal elsewhere can increasingly rely. The vitriol of the backlash against Mantel may partly explain why few would say such things now – but only partly. She was, Mantel wrote in a long essay on the royal body politic through the ages, “as painfully thin as anyone could wish, without quirks, without oddities, without the risk of the emergence of character”. It’s a decade now since the late novelist Hilary Mantel described the then duchess as a “jointed doll on which certain rags are hung”, almost too smooth and plastic to be real. The Princess of Wales at Kirkgate Market in Leeds.
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