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SIRWAl'I‘liRRA|,FI{jH.
1554--1618
34 LAW 4
everyone
would
argue
somemore:
Howshould
theissueshe
phrased?
What
would
appeal
to
Louis,
what
would
annoy
him?
At
whatfimeof
day
shouldthe
representativesapproach
him,
andinwhat
part
oftheVersailles
palace?
What
expression
should
they
haveontheirfaces?
Finally,
afterallthiswas
settled,
thefatefulmomentwould
finally
at»
rive.Thetwomenwould
approachLouis—always
adelicatematterwand
when
theyfinally
had
his
ear,
they
wouldtalkabouttheissue
at
hand,
spelling
outthe
options
in
detail.
Louiswouldlistenin
silence,
amost
enigmatic
lookonhisface.Fi-
nally,
wheneachhadfinishedhis
presentation
andhadaskedforthe
king’s
opinion,
he
would
look
atthemboth
and
say,
“Ishallsee.”Thenhewould
walk
away‘
Theministersandcourtierswouldneverhearanotherwordonthis
subject
fromthe
king——they
would
simply
seethe
result,
weeks
later,
when
hewouldcometoadecisionandact.Hewouldneverbothertoconsult
themonthematter
again.
lnterpretation
LouisXIVwasaman of
very
fewwords.Hismostfamousremarkis
"
‘fiat,
c’estmoi”
(“I
amthe
state”);nothing
couldbemore
pithy
yet
more
eloquent.
His
infamous
“Ishallsee”wasone
of
several
extremely
short
phrases
thathewould
apply
to
all
mannerof
requests.
Louiswasnot
always
this
way;
asa
young
manhewasknownfortalk-
ing
at
length,delighting
inhisown
eloquence.
Hislater
taciturnity
wasself-
imposed,
an
act,
amaskheusedto
keepeverybody
belowhimoff-balance.
Nooneknew
exactly
wherehe
stood,
orcould
predict
hisreactions.No
onecould
try
todeceivehim
bysaying
what
theythought
hewantedto
hear,
because
nooneknewwhathewantedtohear.As
they
talked
on
and
ontothe
silent
Louis,
they
revealedmore
and
moreabout
themselves,
in-
formationhewouldlateruse
against
themto
great
effect.
Inthe
end,
Louis’ssilence
kept
thosearoundhimterrifiedandunder
histhumb.Itwasoneofthefoundationsofhis
power.
As Saint—Simon
wrote,
“No
oneknewas
wellas
he
howto
sellhis
words,
his
smile,
even
his
glances.Everything
inhimwasvaluablebecausehecreated
differences,
andhis
majesty
wasenhanced
by
the
sparseness
ofhiswords.”
Itisevmmore
damagingfor
aministerto
sayfoalishthings
thantodothem.
(Ianlimzlde
Rm,
16131679
KEYST0POWER
Powerisin
manyways
a
game
of
appearances,
andwhen
yousay
lessthan
necessary,youinevitablyappeargreater
andmore
powerful
than
you
are.
Yoursilence
will
makeother
people
uncomfortable.Humansaremachines
of
interpretation
and
explanation;they
havetoknowwhat
you
arethink»
ing.
When
youcarefully
controlwhat
you
reveal,
they
cannot
pierceyour
intentions
or
yourmeaning.