The 48 Laws Of Power

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246 LAW
so


OBSERVANCEOFTHELAWI

The

Japanese

tea
ceremony

called
Cha~no—yu
(“Hot
Water
for

Tea”)

has

origins

inancient
times,

butit
reachedits

peak

ofrefinementinthesix~

teenth
century

underitsmostrenowned
practitioner,

Senno

Rjlcyu.

Al-

though

notfromanoble

family,Rikyu

roseto
great

power,becoming

the

preferred

teamasterofthe

EmperorHideyoshi,

andan
important

adviser

onaestheticandeven

political

matters.For

Rikyu,

thesecretof
success

consistedin
appearing
natural,

concealing

theeffort
behindone’swork.

One

dayRikyu

andhissonwentto
an

acquaintance’s

houseforatea

ceremony.

Onthe
way
in,
thesonremarkedthatthe

lovelyantique—look~

inggate

attheirhost’shouse
gave

itan

evocativelylonelyappearance.

“I

don’tthink
so,”

replied

his
father,

“it
looks
as

though

it
had
been

brought

fromsomemountain

templealongway

off,

and
as
if
thelabor

required

to

import

it
musthavecost
a
lotof

money.”

Iftheownerofthehousehad
put

thismucheffortintoone
gate,

itwouldshowinhistea

ceremony-—-and

in-

deedSenno

Rikyu

hadtoleavethe

ceremonyearly,

unabletoendurethe

affectationandeffortit

inadvertently

revealed.

Onanother

evening,

while

having

teaata
friend’s

house,

Rikyu

saw

his
host
go
outside,
hold
up

a
lanteminthe

darkness,

cutalemonoffa
tree,

and
bring

itin.Thischarmed
Rikyu--the

hostneededa.relishforthedish

hewas
serving,

andhad

spontaneouslygone

outsideto
get

one.Butwhen

themanofferedthelemonwithsomeOsakarice

cake,

Rikyu

realizedthat

hehad

planned

the
cutting

ofthelemonall

along,

to
go

withthis

expensive

delicacy.

The
gesture

no

longer

seemed

spontane0us—~it

wasa
way

forthe

hostto
prove

hiscleverness.Hehad

accidentally

revealedhowhardhe

was
trying.Having

seen

enough,Rikyu

politely

declinedthe
cake,
excused

himself,
andleft.

EmperorHideyoshi

once

planned

tovisit

Rikyu

for
a.tea
ceremony.

On
the

night

beforehe
wasto
come,
snow

began

tofall.

Thinkingquickly,

Rikyu

laidroundcushionsthatfit

exactly

oneachofthe

steppingvstones

thatled

through

the

garden

tohishouse.

Just

before
dawn,
he
rose,
saw

thatithad

stoppedsnowing,

and

carefully

removedthecushions.When

Hideyoshi

arrived,

hemarveledatthe

simplebeauty

ofthe
sight-—tl1eper-

fectly

round
stepping
stones,
unencumbered

by

snow——-andnoticedhowit


called
no
attentiontothemannerinwhich

Rikyu

had

accomplished

it,
but

only

tothe

politegesture

itself.

AfterSenno

Rikyu

died,

hisideashada

profound

influenceonthe

practice

ofthetea
ceremony.

The

Tokugawashogun

Yorinobu,

sonofthe

greatEmperorIeyasu,

wasa
studentof

Rikyu'steachings.

Inhis

garden

he

had
astone
lanternmade

by

afamous
master,
andLordSakaiTadakatsu

asked
if
hecouldcome
by

one

day

toseeit.Yoriuobu

replied

thathewould

be
honored,
andcommandedhis

gardeners

to

puteverything

inorderfor

thevisit. These

gardeners,

unfamiliarwiththe
precepts

of

Cha-no~yu,

thought

thestone
lantern

misshapen,

itswindows

being

too
small
forthe

present

taste.

They

had
a
localworkman

enlarge

thewindows.Afew
days

beforeLordSakai’s
visit,
Yorinobutouredthe

garden.

‘Whenhesawtheal-
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