416 LAW 47
mieshehadmadedevouredhim.The
good
luckthatelevates
you
orseals
your
success
brings
themomentfor
you
to
openyoureyes:
Thewheelof
fortunewillhurtle
you
downas
easily
as
up.
If
youprepare
forthe
fall,
itis
less
likely
toruin
you
whenit
happens.
People
whohavea
run
of
successcancatch
a
kindof
fever,
andeven
when
they
themselves
try
to
stay
calm,
the
people
belowthemoften
pres—
surethemto
go
past
theirmarkandinto
dangerous
waters.Youhaveto
havea
strategy
for
dealing
withthese
people.Simplypreaching
moderar
tionwillmake
you
lookweakand
small-minded;
seeming
tofailtofollow
up
ona
victory
canlessen
yourpower.
WhentheAthenian
general
andstatesman Periclesledaseriesof
naval
campaigns
aroundtheBlackSeain 436
u.(:.,
his
easytriumphs
en-
flamed theAthenians’ desire formore.
They
dreamed of
conquering
Egypt,overrunning
Persia,
sailing
for
Sicily.
Onthe onehand
Pericles
reined
in
these
dangerous
emotions
bywarning
ofthe
perils
ofhubris.On
the
otherhandhefedthem
byfighting
smallbattlesthatheknewhecould
win,
creating
the
appearance
thathewas
preserving
themomentumofsuc»
cess.TheskillwithwhichPericles
played
this
game
isrevealed
by
what
happened
whenhedied:The
demagogues
Cook
over,
pushed
Athensinto
invadingSicily,
andinonerashmove
destroyed
an
empire.
The
rhythm
of
power
often
requires
analternationofforceandcun-
ning.
Toomuchforcecreatesa
counterreaction;
toomuch
cunning,
no
matterhow
cunning
it
is,
becomes
predictable.Working
onbehalfofhis
master,
the
shogun
Oda
Nobunaga,
the
greatsixteenth-centuryjapanese
general
(and
future
emperor)Hideyoshi
once
engineered
a
stunning
vic-
tory
overthe
army
oftheformidableGeneralYoshimoto.The
shogun
wantedto
go
further,
totakeonandcrush
yet
another
powerfulenemy,
but
Hideyoshi
remindedhimoftheold
Japanesesaying:
“When
you
have
wona
victory,tighten
the
strings
of
your
helmet.”For
Hideyoshi
thiswas
the
moment
forthe
shogun
toswitchfromforceto
cunning
andindirec-
tion,
setting
hisenemies
against
oneanother
through
a.seriesof
deceptive
alliances.Inthis
way
hewouldavoid
stirringup
needless
oppositionby
appearingoverlyaggressive.
When
you
are
victorious,then,
lie
low,
and
lullthe
enemy
intoinaction.These
changes
of
rhythm
are
immensely
powerful.
People
who
go
past
themarkareoftenmotivated
by
adesireto
please
amaster
byproving
theirdedication.Butanexcessofeffort
exposesyou
to
theriskof
making
the
master
suspicious
of
you.
Onseveral
occasions,
gen-
eralsunder
Philip
ofMacedonwere
disgraced
anddemoted
immediately
after
leading
their
troops
toa
greatvictory;
onemoresuch
victory,Philip
thought,
andtheman
might
becomearivalinsteadofan
underling.
When
you
servea
master,
itisoftenwisetomeasure
your
victories
carefully,
let-
ting
him
get
the
glory
andnever
making
him
uneasy.
Itisalsowisetoes-
tablisha
pattern
ofstrictobediencetoearnhistrust.Inthefourth
century
B.C.,
a.
captain
underthe
notoriously
severe Chinese
general
WuCh’i
charged
aheadbeforeabattlehad
begun
and camebackwithseveral