mystery
aboutanartistmakeshisorherartwork
immediately
more
intrigu-
ing,
atrickMarcel
Duchamp
played
to
great
effect.Itisall
very
easy
to
clo—-say
littleabout
your
work,
teaseandtitillatewith
alluring,
evencontra~
dictory
comments,
thenstandbackandletothers
try
tomakesenseofitall.
Mysteriouspeopleput
othersinakindofinferior
position—-that
of
try-
ing
to
figure
themout.To
degrees
that
they
can
control,
they
alsoelicitthe
fear
surroundinganything
uncertainorunknown.All
great
leadersknow
thatanauraof
mystery
drawsattentiontothemandcreatesan
intimidating
presence.
Mao
Tse-rung,
for
example,cleverly
cultivated an
enigmatic
image;
hehadnoworriesabout
seeming
inconsistentor
contradicting
him~
self-—fl1e
very
contradictorinessofhisactionsandwordsmeantthathea.l~
ways
had the
upper
hand.No
one,
notevenhisown
wife,
everfelt
they
understood
him,
andhethereforeseemed
larger
thanlife.Thisalsomeant
thatthe
publicpaid
constantattentionto
him,
everanxioustowitnesshis
nextmove.
If
your
social
positionpreventsyou
from
completely
wrapping
your
actionsin
mystery,you
mustatleastlearntomake
yourself
lessobvious.
Every
nowand
then,
actina
way
thatdoesnotmeshwith
other
people’s
perception
of
you.
This
wayyoukeep
thosearound
you
onthe
defensive,
eliciting
thekindofattentionthatmakes
youpowerful.
Done
right,
theore
ationof
enigma.
canalsodrawthekindofattentionthatstrikesterrorinto
yourenemy.
During
theSecondPunicWar
(21940213.0.),
the
greatCarthaginian
general
Hannibalwas
wreaking
havocinhismarchonRome.Hannibal
wasknownforhis
cleverness
and
duplicity.
Underhis
leadershipCarthage’s
army,
though
smallerthanthoseof
the
Romans,
had
constantly
outmaneuvered them. Onone
occasion,
though,
Hann1‘bal’sscoutsmadeahorrible
blunder,
leading
his
troops
into
a
marshy
terrainwiththeseaattheirback.TheRoman
army
blockedthe
mountain
passes
that
led
inland,
andits
general,
Fabius,
wasecstatic-at
lasthehadHannibal
trapped.Posting
hisbestsentriesonthe
passes,
he
workedona
plan
to
destroy
Hannibal’sforces.Butinthemiddleofthe
night,
thesentrieslookeddowntoseea
mysterioussight:
A
hugeproces-
sion
of
lights
was
headingup
themountain.Thousandsandthousandsof
lights.
Ifthis
wasHannibal’s
army,
ithad
suddenlygrown
ahundredfold.
Thesentries
arguedheatedly
aboutwhatthiscouldmean:Reinforce-
mentsfromthesea?
Troops
thathadbeenhiddeninthearea?Ghosts?No
explanation
madesense.
As
they
watched,
firesbrokeoutalloverthe
mountain,
anda
horrible
noisedrified
up
tothemfrom
below,
likethe
blowing
ofamillionhorns.
Demons,
theythought.
The
sentries,
thebravestandmostsensibleinthe
Roman
army,
fledtheir
posts
ina
panic.
By
thenext
day,
Hannibalhad
escaped
fromthemarshland.Whatwas
histrick?Hadhe
reallyconjuredup
demons?
Actually
whathehaddone
wasorderbundlesof
twigs
tobefastenedtothehornsofthethousandsof
oxen
thattraveled
with
his
troops
asbeastsofburden.The
twigs
werethen
LAW6
3
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