The 48 Laws Of Power

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:2()6 LAW 26

PART
II:
MAKEUSEOFTHECAT’S»l’AVV

In

thefable,

the

Monkey

grabs

the
pawof

his

friend,

the
Cat,
andusesitto

fish


chestnutsout
of

the

fire,

thus

getting

thenutshe
craves,
withouthurt-

inghimself

If

thereis

somethingunpleasant

or

unpopular

thatneedstobe
done,

it
is
for

too

riskyforyou

todothework

yourself

Youneedan
catty-{Jaw-—

someonewhodoesthe

dirty,dangerous

work
foryou.

Thecat

’5«pawgrabs

what
you
need,
hurtswhom
you

need
hurt,
and
keeps

people

from

noticing

that
you

aretheone

responsible.

Letsomeoneelsebethe
executioner
orthe

bearer

ofhad

news,
while
you

bringzmlyjoy

and

gladtidings.

OBSERVANCE
OFTHE
LAVV
I

In
59
B.C.,
thefuture

queenCleopatra

of

Egypt,

thenten
years

old,

wit~

nessedtheoverthrowandbanishmentofher
father,

Ptolemy

XII,

atthe

hand of his elder

daughters-«her

own sisters. Oneofthe

daughters,

Berenice,

emerged

astheleaderofthe
rebellion,

andtoensurethatshe

wouldnowrule

Egypt

alone,

she

imprisoned

herothersistersand
mur-

deredherownhusband.This
may

havebeen
necessary

asa

practical

step


tosecureherrule.Butthatamemberofthe

royalfamily,

a
queen

no
less,

wouldso

overtly

exactsuchviolenceonherown
family

horrifiedhersub-

jects

andstirred

uppowerfulopposition.

Four
years

laterthis

opposition

was
abletoreturn

Ptolemy

to
power,

and
he

promptly

hadBereniceand

the
othereldersistersbeheaded.

In 51 B.C.

Ptolemy

died,

leaving

four

remaining

childrenasheirs.As

wasthetraditionin

Egypt,

theeldest
son,

Ptolemy

XIII

(only

tenatthe

time),

marriedtheelder
sister,

Cleopatra

(now

eighteen),

and
the

couple

tookthe
throne

together

as

king

and
queen.

Noneofthefourchildrenfelt

satisfiedwith

this;

everyone,includingCleopatra,

wantedmore
power.

A

struggleemerged

between

Cleopatra

and

Ptolemy,

earl:
trying

to

push

the

othertotheside.

In 48
15.0.,

withthe

help

ofa
government

faction
that
feared

Cleopa-

tra’s
ambitions,

Ptolemy

was
abletoforcehissisterto fleethe
country,

leaving

himselfassoleruler.In
exile,

Cleopatra

schemed.Shewantedto

rulealoneandtorestore

Egypt

toits

pastglory,

a

goal

shefeltnoneofher

other

siblings

could
achieve;
yet

as

long

as

they

were
alive,

shecouldnot

realize

herdream.Andthe

example

ofBerenice
had
madeit
clear
thatno

onewouldservea
queen

whowas
seen

murdering

herownkind.Even

Ptolemy

XIIIhadnotdaredmurder

Cleopatra,although

heknewshe


would

plotagainst

himfromabroad.

Withina
year

after

Cleopatra’s

banishment,

theRomandictator

Julius

Caesararrivedin

Egypt,

determinedtomakethe
country

a
Roman

colony.

Cleopatra

sawher
chance:

ReenteringEgypt

in

disguise,

shetraveledhun-

dredsofmilestoreachCaesarinAlexandria.

Legend

hasitthatshehad
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