The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

I 76 LAW 23


early

seventeenth
century,

itwasnot
King

LouisXIIIwhodecided

things,

itwasthe

king’s

mother.Andsoheattachedhimselfto

her,

and

catapulted

through

theranks
of
the
courtiers,

allthe
way

tothe
top.

Itis

enough

tostrikeoil
once—your

wealthand
power

areassuredfor

alifetime.

Image:

TheArrow.Youcannothittwo
targets

withonearrow.If

yourthoughtsstray,you

miss
the
enemy’s

heart. Mindand

arrowmustbecomeone.
Only

with suchconcentrationof

mental and
physical

power

can
your

arrow

hitthe
target

and

pierce

the

heart.

Authority:

Prize
intensity

morethan

extensity.

Perfectionre»

sidesin

quality,

not

quantity.

Extent
aloneneverrisesabove

mediocrity,

anditisthemisfortuneofmenwithwide

general

intereststhatwhile

they

wouldliketohavetheir

finger

in
every

pie,they

haveoneinnone.

Intensitygives

eminence,
andrises

totheheroicinmatterssublime.

(Baltasar

Gracian,

1601-1658)

REVERSAI.

Thereare

dangers

in
concentration,
andmomentswhen

dispersion

isthe

proper

tacticalmove.

Fighting

theNationalistsforcontrolof
China,

Mao

Tse~tung


andtheCommunists

fought

a

protracted

waronseveral
fronts,

usingsabotage

andambushastheirmain

weapons.Dispersal

isoftensuit-

ablefortheweaker

side;

it
is,

in

fact,

a
crucial

principle

of

guerrilla

warfare.

When

fighting

a
strongerarmy,concentratingyour

forces
only

makes
you

an easier

ta.rget—better

to dissolve intothe
scenery

andfrustrate
your

enemy

withtheelusivenessof
yourpresence.

Tyingyourself

to
a

single

sourceof
power

hasone

preeminentdanger:

Ifthat
person
dies,leaves,
orfallsfrom
grace,you

suffer.Thisiswhat

hap-

pened

toCesare

Borgia,

whoderivedhis
power

fromhis
father,Pope

AlexanderVI.Itwasthe
pope

who
gave

Cesarearmiesto
fight

withand

warsto
wage

inhisname.Whenhe

suddenly

died

(perhaps

from

poison),
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