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The Leopard holds a warning for Europe Will the Continent wake from its torpor?

Can Giorgia Meloni save Italy — and Europe along with it? Massimo Di Vita/Archivio Massimo Di Vita/Mondadori Portfolio/Getty Images

Can Giorgia Meloni save Italy — and Europe along with it? Massimo Di Vita/Archivio Massimo Di Vita/Mondadori Portfolio/Getty Images


December 20, 2024   6 mins

The great unification processes of the late 19th century inspired some of the world’s most famous authors. In 1886, Henry James explored the triangular relationship between a Confederate War veteran from Mississippi and two New England feminist abolitionists in The Bostonians. Fifteen years later, Thomas Mann’s Buddenbrooks chronicled not only the downfall of a Hanseatic merchant family, but also the enduring chasm between north and south in Germany.

If both Henry James and Thomas Mann were writing relatively close to the period they were depicting, Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa’s The Leopard (1958) was written nearly a hundred years after the event. It is nevertheless considered a classic account of the Italian Risorgimento, examining it through the Prince of Salina, a Sicilian aristocrat in his mid-forties who grapples with the forces unleashed on the island by the collapse of the old Bourbon Regime in 1860. And the film version by Luchino Visconti (1963) is still one of the most powerful pieces of cinema ever created.

The Leopard is an extraordinarily ambivalent and complex work of art, but from the historical and political point of view, it is dominated by two themes. First, there is the tension between continuity and change. The Prince, initially loyal to the King in Naples, is persuaded by his impetuous young nephew, Tancredi, that he should embrace the revolution and in so doing neutralise it. “Unless we ourselves take a hand now,” Tancredi famously warns, “they’ll foist a Republic on us. If we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change.”

At least on the surface, it seems as if the Prince’s bet pays off. The revolutionary zealots of Garibaldi are soon replaced by the polished Piedmontese officers of the new united Italian army. The inhabitants of the Prince’s summer holiday retreat at Donnafugata welcome him back as if nothing had changed. Tancredi marries the daughter of the wealthy upstart mayor Don Calogero and goes into politics.

Second, The Leopard exposes the failure of Italian Unification. Lampedusa shows it to have been basically a takeover of the south by the north. The Piedmontese envoy sent to persuade the Prince to become a senator in the new united legislature refers to the happy “annexation” before hastily correcting himself to “union” while the Prince himself predicts that it will “simply mean Torinese rather than Neapolitan dialect, that is all”. Unification was also maimed at the start by the mendacity of the liberal nationalists who simply binned contrary votes in the referendum on unification. In the film, the announcement of the cooked result becomes farcical as the off-key band keeps on breaking into Don Calogero’s platitudinous speech.

The enduring relevance of The Leopard to Italy is obvious. Nearly 175 years after unification, the country remains fundamentally divided between north and south, and more so than any other European country. The Mezzogiorno — as the south of the country is often called — still lags far behind the more developed north. A major contemporary political party, the Lega, formerly Lega Nord, has espoused secession in the past. No wonder that The Leopard is a set text in Italian schools.

It is with respect to Europe as a whole, though, that the book resonates most powerfully today. Before we can understand why, we need to come to a better understanding of the author’s beliefs and intentions. The cynical phrase about things changing so that they can stay the same was certainly Tancredi’s belief and the Prince’s hope, but it reflected neither Lampedusa’s own programme, nor what he was trying to convey about the nature of the Risorgimento. It has been widely misinterpreted.

The author despaired not only of the Sicilian aristocracy from which he descended but also of the island as a whole. We know from his excellent biographer David Gilmour that Lampedusa was no reactionary, but an Anglophile Whig. He dearly wished that his ancestors had grasped, for example, the possibilities opened up to them by the British-brokered Sicilian constitution of 1812. He wanted nothing more than for his countrymen to wake from their torpor and join what he called in the novel “the flow of universal history”. Visconti captured this inertia well with the two great scenes which bookend his film: the lengthy opening recitation of the rosary, so rudely interrupted by news of Garibaldi’s landing; and the interminable dance sequences, a kind of aristocratic rosary, at the end, punctuated by gunshots marking the execution of some now redundant revolutionaries.

It was, in fact, the Prince himself who delivered the most devastating indictment of Sicily’s failure to progress. Surely, the kind if naïve Piedmontese envoy asks, “the Sicilians must want to improve”? The Prince replies that “the Sicilians never want to improve for the simple reason that they think themselves perfect; their vanity is stronger than their misery”. Their “pride”, he continues, is merely “blindness”. What Sicilians want from politics, the Prince says, is “sleep and they will always hate anyone who tries to wake them”. That is why, he explains, the island had always been a “colony” and, we intuit, always will be.

Unsurprisingly, The Leopard shocked Lampedusa’s aristocratic relatives when it came out, and outraged wider opinion in Sicily. The book was clearly an indictment of the island and its history. Leonardo Sciascia, then Sicily’s greatest living writer, bitterly attacked it on those grounds. If he later recanted, then only because he had come to agree with Lampedusa.

The author did not believe that things did not change. They plainly did, even in the novel. The Prince’s power, and that of his class, slips away in myriad ways. He himself acknowledges in a famous exchange with his confessor, Father Pirrone, that the nobility has merely secured a stay of execution, not developed a viable strategy for long-term survival. In due course, Mussolini plunged the nation into a catastrophic war, which Lampedusa alludes to only in passing, in an aside about the Pittsburgh-made American bomb which later shatters the palace in which the ball took place. When Lampedusa was writing in the Fifties, the latest conquerors of Sicily had been the Anglo-Americans who landed on the island in 1943, booted out the Nazis, and blasted his childhood home in Palermo to pieces.

Europe today is Italy yesterday (and today). The continent, Henry Kissinger lamented back in 2019 at a policy event, had “checked out” and was making neither a sufficient financial nor an adequate intellectual contribution to the common defence. If it persisted in this stance, Kissinger also warned, the continent would end up as a “strategic appendage of Eurasia”, of the Sino-Russian cartel — in effect a colony.

Kissinger could easily have expanded the indictment. At the time of his remarks, the European Union was attempting to run a common currency without a common state or even a common economic policy, causing a sovereign debt crisis which nearly destroyed the euro. It had created a passportless common travel area without properly securing its external border, resulting in an unprecedented migration crisis. Meanwhile, the continent was rapidly losing its economic edge to the Indo-Pacific. In the field of security, Europe was not only failing to mobilise against Vladimir Putin’s ambitions but actually deepening its dependency on Russian energy through the construction of a second pipeline through the Baltic Sea.

“Like The Leopard’s Sicilians they prefer the rest of oblivion to the effort of action.”

Since then, the situation has deteriorated further. Even Putin’s full-scale attack on Ukraine, though it produced the biggest European response to date, did not lead to a sea change. In fact, some European countries like Germany are beginning to retreat from the strong stances they adopted at the outset. Olaf Scholz’s much-heralded Zeitenwende has thus joined the long list of turning-points at which German (and European) history failed to turn. Scholz’s government wanted to change things just enough so they could stay the same. In security terms, most of Europe is still little more than an American colony, completely dependent on US military protection. But as the war in Ukraine reaches its denouement and President-elect Donald Trump threatens to withdraw, or at least re-negotiate, the American defence umbrella, the Continent needs to wake from its deep Sicilian slumber.

If Europeans really want things to remain halfway the same, in other words to maintain their standard of living, security and territorial integrity, they will have to make some very far-reaching changes. As British and American observers, including the present author, have repeatedly pointed out there are basically two options. Europe can form a full political union rallying the entire resources of the Continent on the lines of the United Kingdom or the United States. Alternatively, the Continent can re-configure itself as a looser confederation of sovereign nation-states each of which is truly committed to its own and the collective defence through Nato. So far, Europeans have done neither, not because anyone is stopping them, but because like The Leopard’s Sicilians they prefer the rest of oblivion to the effort of action.

Most likely, neither the election of Donald Trump, nor the dire situation in Ukraine will actually rouse Europe from its torpor. As Russia advances, Europeans will recite interminable rosaries about the need to “step up”, but they will not undertake the necessary fundamental reform. Europe’s vanity is stronger than its sense of strategic squalor. Like Lampedusa’s Sicily, the Continent thinks itself already perfect, and certainly far superior to its Anglo-American lecturers. But the idea that Europeans just have to change a little so that things stay the same is an illusion. While the continent sleeps, things are changing, and will continue to change, just not for the better.


Brendan Simms is a professor of international relations and director of the Centre for Geopolitics at the University of Cambridge.


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Michael Cazaly
Michael Cazaly
15 hours ago

“As Russia advances”…? Where does the author consider Russia will “advance” to? Russia has proven itself incapable of advancing very far at all, let alone further in the rest of Ukraine or further westwards in Europe.
As for “Putin’s full scale attack on Ukraine” Barbarossa in reverse it was not, there being nowhere enough troops to take the whole of Ukraine.
No, Europe’s problems are not external, but entirely internal and self generated by creating an over regulated, sclerotic economy incapable of maintaining present living standards let alone raising them. It isn’t Europe being too disunited that’s the problem, it’s being far too united in following Commission diktat to geopolitical irrelevance.
Sorry Professor but you need to either read different books or get out in the real world a bit more to see what is actually happening to normal people in Europe.

leonard o'reilly
leonard o'reilly
14 hours ago

The author mostly provided the solution for Europe: a free trade zone of sovereign states devoted to free market principles, the price of entry being an iron-clad commitment to mutual defence. That it. Enough of that “ever closer union” bullshit. They don’t want or can or need to be that close. This prescription would give them the leisure and luxury to contemplate the historical and cultural reasons for their being together in the first place.

General Store
General Store
6 hours ago

100% free trade + defence and no free movement

Seb Dakin
Seb Dakin
17 hours ago

Really enjoyed that piece.
Which is made much easier by my not living in Europe any more.

Ethniciodo Rodenydo
Ethniciodo Rodenydo
5 hours ago
Reply to  Seb Dakin

I did too. And I learned quite a bit into bargain

Christopher Barclay
Christopher Barclay
12 hours ago

The annexation of Sicily into a greater Italy also led to the rise of the Mafia, an organisation that resisted the encroachment of the Italian state on Sicilian life. In the book, Don Calogero represents this development.
Tancredi’s decision to marry Calogero’s daughter instead of possibly taking her as a mistress was also a revolutionary step. The Sicilian aristocracy had previously been a caste apart, owning large estates of Sicilian farmland but leaving a separate, wealthy life removed from the poverty around them.

Anna Bramwell
Anna Bramwell
4 hours ago

Also the impoverishment of the South, as a walk through Naples, with its multiplicity of palaces and churches will show.Regarding the Northern League, later the League, in 2017 or 18 the League swept Sicily’s polls. A fact worth pondering.

Su Mac
Su Mac
9 hours ago

Surely the best illustration of the complacent, asleep, Sicilian aristocracy is another scene at the ball. The Prince, magnificently played by Burt Lancanster, walks from the luxury of the glittering ballroom to a room with dozens of piss pots on the floor.

The whole film features the most incredible fabrics on clothes and furnishings, the beauty of which is only equalled by the stunning pashminas and robes of the later coloured films of Satyajit Ray like The Chess Players imho. Also the ball scenes always makes me hungry with the feasting on Italian goodies! Yes, very sensual.

Jonathan Nash
Jonathan Nash
9 hours ago
Reply to  Su Mac

And we mustn’t leave unmentioned the equally magnificent Claudia Cardinale.

Andrew Armitage
Andrew Armitage
9 hours ago

The UK is and always has had similar divisions north south and different nations but they were blurred by prosperity and opportunity. An enterprising person could always find opportunity in the colonies or by internal migration. Economic success hides political difficulties, ultimately in Europe we aren’t competitive enough

Anna Bramwell
Anna Bramwell
4 hours ago

In the 1920s Glashow was the richest city in.Britain. A long forgotten sci fi book, Nordington’s Millions, has the hero select Glasgow to survive the coming ecological catastrophe.

Martin Smith
Martin Smith
5 hours ago

‘Europe’ politically should extend itself to include Russia, which is of course itself partly in Europe geographically. German industry and Russian minerals would’ve knocked both America and China into a cocked hat. But now sadly both have been severely weakened. Unfortunately the neo-Conservatives in the State Department have manipulated Ukraine into a war which it cannot win in order to aid the USA in an economic war against the putative Russo-Teutonic alliance which it has won. Pity.

Last edited 5 hours ago by Martin Smith
M To the Tea
M To the Tea
3 hours ago
Reply to  Martin Smith

The goal was to keep Europe dependent just like Africa and when you act out, create a bit of to activate your war traumas and shame to cow you in. Every few decade, a bit of crisis Argentina, Balkans, Ukraine, who is next?
In the meantime, keep the on the peripheral so stream of immigrants keep the public on their toes. You are never safe! Not feeling safe is the word colonization!

Make Russia a boogeyman. Turkey “other” not like us man….and keep fake ideas that you are superior…those others are not special because their lands touch Asia! Asians are many words!

If your neighbor is hungry or angry, you can never have a good night sleep!

Europe needs a reset!

I love Scotland! For no reason. One of my favorite places in the world. Just saying.

You have a chance…

Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
2 hours ago

A great article. The North-South divide is certainly a thing. Some years ago I used to frequent a wine bar off Leicester Square, run by an Italian. One day I mentioned I was shortly to visit Italy on business. Where are you going? Taranto. Pah, he replied, that’s not Italy, that’s North Africa!

Jane Cobbald
Jane Cobbald
3 hours ago

It’s curious how that novel continues to have a relevance. A year ago Helen Thompson discussed it in an UnHerd podcast with Tom McTague, and also found echoes to our time.
There is such a grief and sadness in it, a mourning for a world that can’t continue. Is that the case now? Many seem to think so.
Along with all the other incidents mentioned here, I would add one at the end, where Concetta, the beautiful daughter who loved Tancredi, is a lonely old lady in a crumbling house.

Chauncey Gardiner
Chauncey Gardiner
3 hours ago

Hmm … Economic growth has this way of either masking or resolving lots of problems. And is not one of the bigger problems with Europe west of the Oder River that it’s welfare states are straining and are economically unsustainable? On top of that, the systems are supposed to implement the elites’ green, Net Zero fantasies?
I don’t see a The Leopard metaphor at work here. Aren’t we overthinking things?

Peter Stephenson
Peter Stephenson
2 hours ago

European social democratic governments winning power by bribing electorates with bank busting free stuff – is that going to change? The direction of travel of the all expenses paid bureaucracy in Brussels – is that going to quietly hand in its keys? A conservative upsurge of unprecedented proportions is required. Well meaning, sensible, tradition based, and respectful of the wisdom of the past. Can’t see that, the kiddies think they know everything, and anyway, the so-called elders have stiffed them good and proper, and don’t show many signs of relenting.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
11 hours ago

You write this article as if you are safe in the knowledge that the UK is one of the best run and prosperous countries in the first world. There are probably 4-6 countries in Europe who are far better run, wealthier, healthier and socially more stable than the UK. As for defense and security, that is a major issue you are right, and that weak position very much includes the UK.
I took a subscription to this newspaper thinking that it was going to provide an accurate, unbiased and well informed view of what is going on both in the UK and in the wider world. Turns out its very much a ‘Little Britain’ tabloid which amongst other things is still desparately scraping the bottom of the ‘brexit benefits’ barrel.

Citizen Diversity
Citizen Diversity
10 hours ago
Reply to  UnHerd Reader

Take a short holiday in the famed seaside resort of Blackpool and walk around the town. There’s no indication there of anything being prosperous or well-governed. It’s by no means the only such place.
And then there’s the people. Over 2.5 million are on long-term sickness disability benefit. Once a person gains these benefits they are essentially written off as to any future prospect of employment and for the most part their situation is never reviewed again. This one of the structural features of the UK. How can this thing ‘change while remaining the same’?

Dennis Roberts
Dennis Roberts
1 hour ago
Reply to  UnHerd Reader

The article isn’t about ‘Little Britain’, though pretty much all of UnHerd’s contributors and readership are well aware of the UKs situation and there are quite definitely a number of EU countries better off than the UK.

However, you appear to be coming from the position that any criticism the EU must be due to being on the ‘wrong’ side of Brexit. The EU is no more perfect than anywhere else, and this article merely discusses one of its issues. Disagree if you like, but I’d suggest you broaden your own mind a little first.

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
39 minutes ago
Reply to  Dennis Roberts

Well said.