The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

284 LAW 34


Onthe
night

of

February

23,

acrowdofParisianssurroundedthe

palace.

With asuddenness that

caught everyone by surprise,

Louis-

Philippe

abdicated
that

veryevening

andfledto

England.

Heleftnosue»

cessor,
noreventhe

suggestion

ofone-—hiswhole
government

folded
up

anddissolvedlikea
traveling

circus

leaving

town.

Interpretation

Louis-Philippeconsciously

dissolvedthe aurathat

natu.rallypertains

to

kings

andleaders.

Scoffing

atthe

symbolism

of

grandeur,

hebelieveda

newworldwas

dawning,

whererulersshouldactand belike

ordinary

citi

zens.Hewas
right:

Anew
world,

without

kings

and
queens,

was

certainly

onits
way.

Hewas

profoundlywrong,

however,

in

predicting

a

change

in

the

dynamics

of
power.

The

bourgeoisking’s

hatandumbrellaamusedtheFrenchat
first,
but

soon

grewirritating.People

knewthat

Louis-Philippe

wasnot

really

like

thematall—thatthehatandumbrellawere

essentially

akindoftricktoen-

courage

theminthe

fantasy

thatthe
country

had

suddenlygrown

more

equal.Actually,though,

the
divisionsofwealthhadneverbeen
greater.

TheFrench

expected

theirrulertobeabitofa
showman,
tohavesome

presence.

Evenaradicallike

Robespierre,

whohad

briefly

cometo
power

during

theFrenchRevolution
fiftyyears
earlier,

hadunderstood
this,

and

cenainlyNapoleon,

whohadturnedthe

revolutionaryrepublic

into
anim

per-ialregime,

hadknown
itin
hisbones.Indeed
as
soonas
Louis—Phi1ippe

fled the
stage,

the French revealed their true desire:

They

elected

Napoleon’sgrand-nephewpresident.

Hewasavirtual
unknown,
but

they

hoped

hewouldrecreatethe

greatgeneral’spowerful

aura,

erasing

the

awkward
memory

ofthe

“bourgeoisking.”

Powerful

peoplemay

be

tempted

toaffect
a
common-man
aura,

trying

tocreatetheillusionthat

they

andtheir

subjects

or

underlings

are

basically

thesame.Butthe

people

whomthisfalse
gesture

isintendedto
impress

will

quickly

see

through

it.

They

understandthat

they

arenot

beinggiven

more

power——that


it

onlyappears

asif

they

sharedinthe

powerfulperson’s

fate.

The

only

kindof
commontouch
that
worksisthekindailected
by

Franklin

Roosevelt,
a

style

thatsaidthe

president

sharedvaluesand

goals

withthe

common

people

evenwhileheremaineda
patrician

atheart.Henever

pretended

toerasehisdistancefromthecrowd.

Leaderswho
try

todissolvethatdistance

through

afalse
chumrniness

gradually

lose
the
ability

to

inspireloyalty,

fear,

orlove.Instead

they

elicit

contempt.

Like

Louis—Philippe,they

aretoo
uninspiring

eventobeworth

the
guillotine-——the

best

they

candois

simply

vanishinthe

night,

asif

they

wereneverthere.

OBSERVANCEOFTHELAW

When

Christopher

Columbuswas
trying

tofind
funding

forhis

legendary

voyages,many

aroundhimbelievedhecamefromtheItalian

aristocracy.

Thisviewwas
passed

into

historythrough

a

biography

writtenaftertheex-

plorer’s

death
by

his
son,

whichdescribeshimasa
descendant
ofa
Count
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