The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

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.)
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