So the fairy tale has a new chapter, and it reads like a medical bulletin from the Russian front. Norway’s crown princess, that shimmering symbol of Nordic perfection, lies waiting for a lung transplant, her condition critical. The palace confirms. The public prays. And I, for one, cannot help but see this as a parable for the age.
Let us be clear: I wish the princess no ill. But the spectacle of a royal body reduced to a waiting list, a mechanical ventilator, a desperate prayer to the organ donation gods, is a mirror held up to our own decadence. We have built a world where the crown itself is a patient, where kings and queens are mere mortals hooked to machines, where the very air we breathe has become a poison.
Consider the parallels. The late Roman Empire, in its final spasms, saw its emperors die of diseases we now call ‘lifestyle.’ Gout, stroke, infection: the fruits of excess and systemic rot. Today’s royals, in their gilded cages, suffer from the same ailments as the rest of us: pollution, stress, the slow biological decay that comes from living in a world that has forgotten what it means to be well. The princess’s lungs, I am told, are failing. But is it her lungs or the lungs of the body politic?
Norway, that slick social democratic state, prides itself on health, on equality, on the orderly queue. And yet here is its princess, queuing like everyone else for a transplant. The egalitarian ideal, taken to its logical conclusion, means that even royalty must wait for the bell to toll. There is a certain justice in this, a grim democracy of the sickbed. But there is also a terrifying impotence. The state can tax, it can regulate, it can build hospitals. But it cannot manufacture a pair of healthy lungs. It cannot command the body to obey.
We have, in our hubris, convinced ourselves that science will save us. That the machine will breathe for us. That the transplant list is a temporary inconvenience. But the princess’s crisis reminds us that the body is not a machine. It is a fragile, finite thing, a piece of organic matter that decays whether you wear a tiara or a flat cap. And when it fails, all the pomp and circumstance, all the constitutional safeguards, all the oil wealth in the North Sea, cannot patch it up.
What, then, does this say about the state of our civilisation? We are, in the West, living through a period of intellectual and spiritual decadence. We have abandoned the old verities: duty, sacrifice, and the acceptance of mortality. We have replaced them with a sterile, clinical hope: the hope of the transplant list, the hope of the next breakthrough, the hope that we can cheat death with a scalpel and a donor card. But the princess’s condition is not a medical problem. It is a spiritual one. A society that cannot bear the thought of a royal dying is a society that cannot bear the thought of its own death.
The Victorians, for all their prudishness, understood death. They draped it in black, they built monuments to it, they let it into the parlour. We, by contrast, hide it in intensive care units, we whisper it in press releases, we make it a matter of statistics and waiting times. The princess’s illness is a scandal precisely because it forces us to look at the unvarnished reality: we are all waiting for the transplant, the bypass, the final diagnosis.
There is no easy moral here. Only the cold facts: a princess is dying, a nation is watching, and the machine of modernity whirs on, indifferent. Perhaps, when the transplant comes, she will recover and the fairy tale will resume. But perhaps, just perhaps, this is the moment when we should pause and ask ourselves: what kind of world have we built, where even a princess must barter for her breath? The answer, I suspect, is not a pleasant one.










