The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

TRANSGRESSIONOFTHELAVV


Ch’inShih


Huang

Ti,

thefirst
emperor

ofChina

(221-210B.C.),

wasthe

mightiest

manofhis

day.

His

empire

wasvasterandmore

powerful

than

that
ofAlexandertheGreat.Hehad


conquered

allofthe

kingdoms

sur-

rounding

his
own

kingdom

ofChinandunifiedthemintoonemassive

realmcalledChina.Butinthelast
years


ofhis
life,
few,
if
anyone,

sawhim.

The
emperor

livedinthemost

magnificent

palace

builttothat

date,

in

the


capital

of

Hsien-yang.

The

palace

had
270

pavilions;

allof
these
were

connected


by

secret

undergroundpassageways,allowing

the
emperor

to

move


through

the

palace

without

anyoneseeing

him.He

slept

in
a
differ-—

entroom


everynight,

and
anyone

who

inadvertently

laid
eyes

onhimwas

instantly

beheaded.
Only

ahandfulofmenknewhis

whereabouts,

andif

they

revealeditto

anyone,they,

too,
were
put

todeath.

The
first
emperor

had
grown

soterrified
ofhumanContact
thatwhen

hehadtoleave
the


palace

hetraveled

incognito,disguising

himselfcare

fully.

Ononesuch

tripthrough

the

provinces,

he

suddenly

died.His

body

wasbornebacktothe


capital

inthe

emperor’scarriage,

withacart

packed

withsalted fish


trailing

behindittocover
up

thesmell ofthe
rotting

corpse-—~no


onewastoknowofhisdeath.Hedied
alone,

farfromhis

wives,
his


family,

his
friends,
andhis
courfiers,

accompaniedonlyby

a

ministerand
a
handfulofeunuchs.


Interpretation

Shih


Huang

Tistartedoffasthe

king

of
Ch’in,
afearlesswarriorofunbri-

dled
ambition.Writersof
the
timedescribed
himasaman
with“a

waspish

nose,
eyes


like

slits,

the
voice
ofa

jackal,

andtheheart
ofa
tiger

orwolf.”

Hecouldbemerciful
sometimes,
butmoreoftenhe“swallowedmen
up


withouta


scruple.”

Itwas

through

trickery

andviolencethathe

conquered

the


provincessurrounding

hisownandcreated
China,

forging

a

single

na-

tionandcultureoutof
many.


Hebroke
up

thefeudal

system,

andto

keep

an
eye


onthe
many

membersofthe

royal

familiesthatwerescattered

acrosstherealm’svarious


kingdoms,

hemoved

120,000

ofthemtothe
cap-

ital,
wherehehousedthemost
important


couxtiersinthevast

palace

of

Hsienyang.

Heconsolidatedthe
many

wallsonthebordersandbuiltthem

into
theGreat
Wall
ofChina.
Hestandardizedthe


country’s

laws,

its
writ-

ten


language,

even
thesize
ofits
cartwheels.

As
part

ofthis
process

of
unification,
however,

thefirst
emperor

out-

lawedthe
writings


and

teachings

of
Confucius,
the

philosopher

whose

ideasonthemorallifehad


already

become

virtually

a

religion

inChinese

culture.OnShih

Huang

Ti’s
order,

thousandsofbooks

relating

toConfu-

cius
were
burned,
and
anyone


who

quoted

Confuciuswastobe
beheaded.

This
made
many


enemiesforthe
emperor,

and
he

grewconstantly

afraid,

even


paranoid.

Theexecutionsmounted.A
contemporary,

thewriterHan-

fei-tzu,

notedthat“Ch’inhasbeenvictoriousforfour

generations,yet

has

livedinconstantterror
and


apprehension

ofdestruction.”

Asthe
emperor

withdrew

deeper

and

deeper

intothe

palace

to
protect

'lHI.
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LAWis 131
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