The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

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
53
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