The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

52 LAW 6


KEYSTOPOWER

Inthe
past,

theworldwasfilledwiththe
terrifying

andunknowable—

diseases,disasters,

capriciousdespots,

the
mystery

ofdeathitself.Whatwe

couldnot
understand
we

reimagined

as

myths

and

spirits.

Overthecen-

turies,

though,

wehave

managed,through

scienceand
reason,

to
illumi-

natethe

darkness;

whatwas

mysterious

and
forbidding

has
grown

familiar

andcomfortable.Yetthis
light

hasa

price:

inaworldthatisevermore

banal,
thathashadits
mystery

and

mythsqueezed

outof
it,
we

secretly

crave

enigmas, people

or

things

thatcannot be

instantlyinterpreted,

seized,


andconsumed.

Thatisthe
power

ofthe

mysterious:

Itinvites

layers

of
interpretation,

excitesour
imagination,

seducesusinto

believing

thatitconcealssome-

thing

marvelous.Theworldhasbecomesofamiliaranditsinhabitantsso

predictable

thatwhat
wraps

itselfin
mystery

willalmost

always

drawthe

limelight

toitand
make
uswatchit.

Donot
imagine

thattocreateanairof
mysteryyou

havetobe

grand

and

awe~inspirlng.Mystery

thatiswoveninto

yourday-to-day

demeanor,

andis

subtle,

hasthatmuchmore
power

tofascinateandattractattention.

Remember:Most

people

are

upfront,

canbereadlikean
open
book,

take

littlecaretocontroltheirwordsor

image,

andare

hopelesslypredictable.

Bysimplyholding

back,

keeping

silent,

occasionallyutteringarnbiguous

phrases,deliberatelyappearing

inconsistent,
and
acting

oddintliesubtlest

of
ways,you

willemanateanauraof
mystery.

The

people

around
you

will

then

magnify

thataura

byconstantlydying

to
interpretyou.

Bothartistsandconartistsunderstandthevitallinkbetween

being

mysterious

and
attracting

interest.CountVictor

Lustig,

thearistocratof

swindlers,

played

the
game

to

perfection.

Hewas

alwaysdoingthings

that

were
different,

orseemedtomakenosense.Hewouldshow
up

atthebest

hotelsinalimodriven

byajapanese

chauffeur;

noonehadeverseena

Japanese

chauffeur
before,

sothisseemedexoticand

strange.Lustig

would

dressinthemost

expensiveclothing,

but

always

with

something—a

medal,

a
flower,

anarrnband—outof

place,

atleastinconventionalterms.This

wasseennotastastelessbutasoddand
intriguing.

Inhotelshewouldbe

seen

receivingtelegrams

atall
hours,

oneafierthe
other,

brought

tohim
by

his

Japanesechauffeur—telegrams

hewouldtear
up

withutternoncha-

lance.
(In

fact

they

were

fakes,

completelyblank.)

Hewouldsitaloneinthe

dining

room,

reading

a

large

and

impressive-looking

book,

smiling

at
peo-

pleyetremaining

aloof.Vlfithinafew

days,

of
course,

theentire hotel

wouldbeabuzzwithinterestinthis
strange

man.

All
thisattentionallowed

Lustig

tolure
suckers
inwithease.

They

would

beg

forhisconfidenceandhis

company.Everyone

wantedtobe

seenwiththis

mysterious

aristocrat.Andinthe
presence

ofthis

distracting

enigma,they

wouldn’tevennoticethat

they

were

being

robbedblind.

Anairof
mystery

canmakethemediocre

appearintelligent

and
pro-

found.
It
made
Mata
Hari,

a
womanof
averageappearance

and
intelli-

gence,

seemlikea

goddess,

andher

dancingdivinelyinspired.

Anairof
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