'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