The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

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
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