The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1
'l'l||Ill
\
F'|‘|.ltr’\'l‘

Pll;\R>i,\l.l.\

Whenthe(W1)armies

/Julius
Cazamrivtmrl

Pampry’s]

werecame

intu
Plturyzllitt,
and

both
mmmpterl
Ilwre.

Pompreyistlzrmghtx
ran

thexurne
way

as
they

haddone
before,

agtumtfiglztiug.

..
.But

thosewhowereabout

himwere
grmtly(,’(mfl-

zlrmonu‘cz'ss.
.
,us
if

tlugv


hml
«I/ready

mru/uerod.

.. .The


rruvulrv
t.'.i‘/7r'<tt'all_v
were

obstinate
farfigltrtrzg,

bflmgvplerzt/izlly


armed

and
bravely
mnuntzvrl.

and
valuirtg
thmzsrelves

uponthcfine

horses

they
kept,
and
upon

theirownhandmrm"

persons.‘

asalso
upon

the
atlvunmgcof

their

numl1er\'.
forthey
were

five
Ihtmyaml
against

onethousand
of

(Trtcxtrrit.Norwerethe

number:
oftheinfamr_v


less
t1i.\[Irt)pnrtitmult'.

there
lwingforty-five

thousand
ofPompey

It

uguimt!WL’7t/‘V-(wt)

thottsunrl
uflhoenemy.

(The
mut
day]
whilst

the
infantry

wasthus

sharplyengagml

inthe

mainbattle,onthe

/tcmh
POInp4:y'.s'
horse

rode
upam,/irlemly.

and
npenerl[his

cavalry'.s'l
ranks
very

wide,
that
theymight

surroundthe
rightwing


of
Caesar.But
before

theyengaged,
Caesar's

whorlsl'll.\’h€(Ioutand

attacked
them,
anddid

notduntheir
mveltus

atatlistarm’.I1rN‘.S‘lrlh‘('

atthe
thighv
and
legs,

as
theyusually
didin

rlose
battle.
butaimerl

attlmir
frurcx.
Forthus

275
LAW 33


Interpretation

Catherinehadseen

veryearly

onthe
sway

thatamistresshasoveraman

of
power:

Herown
husband,

Henri
II,

had

kept

one
of
themostinfamous

mistressesofthem

all,

Diane
dePoitiers.WhatCatherinelearnedfromthe

experience

wasthatamanlikeherhusbandwantedtofeelhecouldwina

womanoverwithout

having

to

rely

onhis
status,
whichhehadinherited

ratherthanearned.Andsuchaneedcontaineda

huge

blind

spot:

As

long

asthewoman

began

theaffair
byacting

asifshehadbeen

conquered,

the

man
would
failto
notice
that
asdine
passed

themistresshadcometohold

power

over
him,
asDianedePoitiersdidoverHenri.ItwasCatherine’s

strategy

toturnthisweaknesstoher

advantage,using

itasa
way

to
conquer

andcontrolmen.Allshehadtodowasunleashtheloveliestwomeninthe

court,

her

“flyingsquadron,”

onmenwhomsheknew
sharedherhus«

ba.nd’s

vulnerability.

Remember.

Always

lookfor

passions

andobsessionsthatcannotbe

controlled.The
stronger

the

passion,

themorevulnerablethe
person.

This

may

seem

surprising,

for

passionatepeople

look
strong.

In

fact,however,

they

are

simplyfilling

the
stage

withtheir

theatricality,distractingpeople

fromhowweakand

helplesstheyreally

are.Aman’sneedto
conquer

women

actually

revealsatremendous

helplessness

thathasmadesuckers

outofthemforthousandsof
years.

Lookatthe
part

ofa
person

thatismost

visible—their

greed,

their
lust,

theirintensefear.Thesearetheemotions

they

cannot

conceal,

andoverwhich

they

havethe
leastcontrol.Andwhat

people

cannot
control,
you

can
controlforthem.

ObservanceIV

Arabella
Huntington,

wife ofthe

greatlate-nineteenth-century

railroad

magnate

Collis P.


Huntington,

camefromhumble
origins

and

always

struggled

forsocial
recognitionamong

her

wealthypeers.

Whenshe
gave

a

party

inherSan
Francisco
mansion,
fewofthesocialelitewouldshow
up;

mostofthemtookherfora

golddigger,

nottheirkind.Becauseofherhus-

band’sfabulous
wealth,
artdealerscourted

her,

butwithsuchcondescen-

sion

theyobviously

sawherasan

upstart.Only

onemanof
consequence

treatedher

difl’erently:

thedealer

Joseph

Duveen.

Forthefirstfew
years

ofDuveen’s

relationship

with
Arabella,
hemade

noeiforttosell

expensive

arttoher.Insteadhe

accompanied

hertofine

stores,

chatted

endlessly

about
queens

and

princesses

he
knew,

onandon.

At

last,

she

thought,

amanwhotreatedherasan

equal,

evena
superior,

in

highsociety.

Meanwhile,

ifDuveendidnot
try

tosellartto
her,

he
did
sub-

tly

educate
her
inhisaesthetic
ideas——n-amely,

thatthebestatwasthe

most

expensive

art.AndafterArabellahadsoaked
up

his
way

of
seeing

things,

Duveenwouldactasifshe

always

had

exquisite

taste,

even

though

beforeshemethimheraestheticshadbeen

abysmal.

WhenCollis
Huntington
died,

in
1900,

Arabella
cameinto
afortune.

She

suddenly

started to

buyexpensive paintings, by

Rembrandtand

Velazquez,

for

exa.rnple—andonly

fromDuveen.YearslaterDuveensold

her

Gainsb0rough’s

Blue
Boy

forthe

highestprice

ever
paid

foraworkof
Free download pdf