The 48 Laws Of Power

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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.
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