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