128 LAW 17
heallowedhimafairamountoflatitudein
handling
his
paintings,
thenone
day,
forno
apparent
reason,
hetoldthemanhewouldno
longergive
him
any
worktosell.AsPicasso
explained,“Rosenberg
would
spend
thenext
forty-eight
hours
trying
to
figure
out
why.
WasI
reservingthings
forsome
otherdealer?I’d
go
on
working
and
sleeping
and
Rosenberg
would
spend
histime
figuring.
Intwo
days
he’dcome
back,
nerves
jangled,
anxious,
say»
ing,
‘After
all,
dear
friend,you
wouldn’tturnmedownifIoffered
you
this
much
[naming
a
substantiallyhigherfigure]
forthose
paintings
ratherthan
the
price
Pvebeenaccustomedto
payingyou,
would
you?’
”
Unpredictability
is
not
only
a
weapon
ofterror:
Scramblingyourpat-
ternsona
day-to-day
basiswillcauseastiraround
you
andstimulateintet—
est.
People
willtalkabout
you,
ascribemotivesand
explanations
thathave
nothing
todowith
thetruth,
butthat
keepyouconstantly
intheirminds.In
the
end,
themore
capriciousyouappear,
themore
respectyou
will
garner.
Only
the
terminally
subordinateactina
predictable
manner.
Image:
The
Cyclone.
A
windthatcannotbefore-
seen.Sudden
shiftsin
the
barometer,
in—
explicable changes
in direction and
velocity.
Thereis
nodefense:
A
cyclone
sows
terror and
confusion.
Authority:
The
enlightened
rulerisso
mysterious
thatheseems
todwell
nowhere,
so
inexplicable
thatnoonecanseekhim.
He
repose-s
innonaction
above,
and
his
ministers
tremble
below.
(Han-fei-tzu,
Chinese
philosopher,
third
century
B.C.)