Germany and Denmark are on fire. Not literally, of course, but the mercury has climbed to record-shattering heights, and the British Isles now brace for the same atmospheric tantrum. The headlines are breathless. The experts are grave. And I, for one, am reaching for my smelling salts – not from the heat, but from the sheer predictability of the discourse.
Let us be clear: this is not an unprecedented catastrophe. The Roman Empire saw its share of scorchers. The medieval warm period toasted vineyards in England. What has changed is not the weather, but our collective nerve. We have become a people who gasp at a heatwave as though it were the apocalypse, when our ancestors would have simply doffed their hats and soldiered on. This is decadence, plain and simple.
Consider the Teutonic response. German efficiency, that fabled trait, has melted into a puddle of panic. Trains are delayed. Rivers are low. The ‘Wirtschaftswunder’ is under threat from a few days of sun. Danish hygge, that cosy cult of comfort, has curdled into a sweaty mess. I half expect the next headline to read: ‘IKEA flatpacks spontaneously combust in record heat.’ Meanwhile, Britain prepares. We queue. We tut. We stockpile Pimm’s and sunscreen. This is the national character: a stiff upper lip that grows chapped in the sun.
But the real issue here is not the temperature. It is the intellectual decadence that accompanies our reaction. Every heatwave is now a referendum on modernity. We are told this is the new normal, the revenge of a planet scorned. Perhaps. But let us recall that every civilisation that has collapsed did so not because of a single hot summer, but because of a failure of will. The Romans forgot how to be Romans. The Victorians, for all their faults, built empires and railways while wearing three-piece suits. We build air-conditioned pods and complain about the cost of running them.
I am not a climate denier. I am a decadence denier. I deny that we must surrender our agency to a thermostat. We are not victims of the sun. We are victims of a mindset that sees every natural event as a crisis rather than a cycle. The great historian Gibbon noted that the Roman Empire declined when it stopped being able to adapt. We are adapting by panicking. That is not adaptation. That is surrender.
So let the heatwave shatter records. Let the mercury rise. The real test is not our ability to forecast the weather, but our ability to meet it with poise. Germany, Denmark, Britain: we are all in the same sauna. The question is whether we will emerge with our wits intact or dissolve into a puddle of hand-wringing. History will judge us not by the temperature, but by our temper.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a glass of lukewarm lemonade and a book on the fall of Rome. The sun will set. The empire will totter. And I will write another column.








