Isolate the Victim
An isolated person is weak. By slowly isolating your victims, you make them more vulnerable to your influence. Their isolation may be psychological: by filling their field of vision through the
pleasurable attention you pay them, you crowd out everything else in their mind. They see and think only of you. The isolation may also be physical: you take them away from their normal milieu, friends,
family, home. Give them the sense of being marginalized, in limboโย they are leaving one world behind and entering another. Once isolated like this, they have no outside support, and in their confusion they are easily led astray. Lure the seduced into your lair, where nothing is familiar.
In the state of Wu great preparations had been made for the reception of the two beauties. The
king received them in audience surrounded by his ministers and all his court. As they approached
him the jade pendants attached to their girdles made a musical sound and the air was fragrant
with the scent of their gowns. Pearl ornaments and kingfisher feathers adorned their hair.ย โขFu Chai,
the king of Wu, looked into the lovely eyes of Hsi Shill (495-472 B.C.) and forgot his people and his state. Now she did not turn away and blush as she had done three years previously beside the little
brook. She was complete mistress of the art of seduction and she knew how to encourage the king to look again. Fu Chai hardly noticed the second
girl, whose quiet charms did not attract him. He had eyes only for Hsi Shih, and before the
audience was over those at court realized that the girl would be a force to be reckoned with and that she would be able to influence the king either for good or ill.ย โข Amidst the revelers in the halls of
Wu, Hsi Shih wove her net of fascination about the heart of the susceptible monarch.ย โInflamed by
wine, she now begins to sing / The songs of Wu to please the fatuous king;ย /ย And in the dance of Tsu she subtly blends / All rhythmic movements to her sensuous ends.โย But she could do more than
sing and dance to amuse the king. She had wit, and her grasp of politics astonished him. When there
was anything she wanted she could shed tears which so moved her loverโs heart that he could refuse her nothing. For she was, as Fan Li had
said, the one and only, the incomparable Hsi Shih, whose magnetic personality attracted everyone,
many even against their own will.ย โข Embroidered
silk curtains encrusted with coral and gems, scented furniture and screens inlaid with jade and mother-of- pearl were among the luxuries which
surrounded the favorite.ย On one of the hills
near the palace there was a celebrated pool of
clear water which has been known ever since as the pool of the king of Wu. Here, to amuse her
lover, Hsi Shih would make her toilet, using the pool as a mirror while the infatuated king combed her hair. . . .
โELOISE TALCOTT HIBBERT, EMBROIDERED GAUZE: PORTRAITS OF FAMOUS
CHINESE LADIES
Isolationโthe Exotic Effect
In the early fifth century B.C., Fu Chai, the Chinese king of Wu, defeated his great enemy, Kou Chien, the king of Yueh, in a series of battles. Kou
Chien was captured and forced to serve as a groom in Fu Chaiโs stables. He was finally allowed to return home, but every year he had to pay a large
tribute of money and gifts to Fu Chai. Over the years, this tribute added up, so that the kingdom of Wu prospered and Fu Chai grew wealthy.
One year Kou Chien sent a delegation to Fu Chai: they wanted to know if he would accept a gift of two beautiful maidens as part of the tribute. Fu Chai was curious, and accepted the offer. The women arrived a few days later, amid much anticipation, and the king received them in his palace. The two approached the throneโtheir hair was magnificently coiffured, in what was called โthe cloud-clusterโ style, ornamented with pearl ornaments and kingfisher feathers. As they walked, jade pendants hanging from their
girdles made the most delicate sound. The air was full of some delightful perfume. The king was extremely pleased. The beauty of one of the girls far surpassed that of the other; her name was Hsi Shih. She looked him in the
eye without a hint of shyness; in fact she was confident and coquettish, something he was not used to seeing in such a young girl.
Fu Chai called for festivities to commemorate the occasion. The halls of the palace filled with revelers; inflamed with wine, Hsi Shih danced before the king. She sang, and her voice was beautiful. Reclining on a couch of
white jade, she looked like a goddess. The king could not leave her side.
The next day he followed her everywhere. To his astonishment, she was witty, sharp, and knowledgeable, and could quote the classics better than he could. When he had to leave her to deal with royal affairs, his mind was full of her image. Soon he brought her with him to his councils, asking her
advice on important matters. She told him to listen less to his ministers; he was wiser than they were, his judgment superior.
Hsi Shihโs power grew daily. Yet she was not easy to please; if the king failed to grant some wish of hers, tears would fill her eyes, his heart would melt, and he would yield. One day she begged him to build her a palace
outside the capital. Of course, he obliged her. And when he visited the palace, he was astounded at its magnificence, even though he had paid the bills: Hsi Shih had filled it with the most extravagant furnishings. The
grounds contained an artificial lake with marble bridges crossing over it. Fu Chai spent more and more time here, sitting by a pool and watching Hsi
Shih comb her hair, using the pool as a mirror. He would watch her playing with her birds, in their jeweled cages, or simply walking through the palace, for she moved like a willow in the breeze. The months went by; he stayed in the palace. He missed councils, ignored his family and friends, neglected
his public functions. He lost track of time. When a delegation came to talk to him of urgent matters, he was too distracted to listen. If anything but Hsi Shih took up his time, he worried unbearably that she would be angry.
Finally word reached him of a growing crisis: the fortune he had spent on the palace had bankrupted the treasury, and the people were discontented.
He returned to the capital, but it was too late: an army from the kingdom of Yueh had invaded Wu, and had reached the capital. All was lost. Fu Chai had no time to rejoin his beloved Hsi Shih. Instead of letting himself be captured by the king of Yueh, the man who had once served in his stables, he committed suicide.
Little did he know that Kou Chien had plotted this invasion for years, and that Hsi Shihโs elaborate seduction was the main part of his plan.
Interpretation.ย Kou Chien wanted to make sure that his invasion of Wu would not fail. His enemy was not Fu Chaiโs armies, or his wealth and his resources, but his mind. If he could be deeply distracted, his mind filled with something other than affairs of state, he would fall like ripe fruit.
Kou Chien found the most beautiful maiden in his realm. For three years he had her trained in all of the artsโnot just singing, dancing, and calligraphy, but how to dress, how to talk, how to play the coquette. And it worked: Hsi Shih did not allow Fu Chai a momentโs rest. Everything about her was exotic and unfamiliar. The more attention he paid to her hair, her moods, her glances, the way she moved, the less he thought about diplomacy and war. He was driven to distraction.
All of us today are kings protecting the tiny realm of our own lives, weighed down by all kinds of responsibilities, surrounded by ministers and advisers. A wall forms around usโwe are immune to the influence of other people, because we are so preoccupied. Like Hsi Shih, then, you must lure your targets away, gently, slowly, from the affairs that fill their mind. And what will best lure them from their castles is the whiff of the exotic. Offer
something unfamiliar that will fascinate them and hold their attention. Be different in your manners and appearance, and slowly envelop them in this different world of yours. Keep your targets off balance with coquettish
changes of mood. Do not worry that the disruption you represent is making them emotionalโthat is a sign of their growing weakness. Most people are ambivalent: on the one hand they feel comforted by their habits and duties, on the other they are bored, and ripe for anything that seems exotic, that
seems to come from somewhere else. They may struggle or have doubts, but exotic pleasures are irresistible. The more you can get them into your world, the weaker they become. As with the king of Wu, by the time they realize what has happened, it is too late.
In Cairo Aly bumped into [the singer] Juliette
Greco again. He asked her to dance.ย โขย โYou have too bad a reputation,โ she replied. โWeโre going to sit very much apart. โ – โข โWhat are you doing
tomorrow?โ he insisted.ย โขย โTomorrow I take a
plane to Beirut. โย โขย When she boarded the plane, Aly was already on it, grinning at her surprise.ย โข
Dressed in tight black leather slacks and a black sweaterย [Greco]ย stretched languorously in an
armchair of her Paris house and observed: โข
โThey say I am a dangerous woman. Well, Aly was a dangerous man. He was charming in a very special way. There is a kind of man who is very
clever with women. He takes you out to a restaurant and if the most beautiful woman comes in, he doesnโt look at her. He makes you feel you are a queen. Of course, I understood it. I didnโt
believe it. I would laugh and point out the beautiful woman. But that is me.ย Most women
are made very happy by that kind of attention. Itโs pure vanity. She thinks, โIโll be the one and the
others will leave.โย โขย โ.ย With Aly, how the woman
felt was most important.ย He was a great charmer,
a great seducer. He made you feel fine and that everything was easy. No problems. Nothing to
worry about. Or regret. It was always, โWhat can I do for you? What do you need?โ Airplane tickets, cars, boats; you felt you were on a pink cloud. โ
โLEONARD SLATER, โALY:A BIOGRAPHY,
IsolationโThe โOnly Youโ Effect
In 1948, the twenty-nine-year-old actress Rita Hayworth, known as Hollywoodโs Love Goddess, was at a low point in her life. Her marriage to Orson Welles was breaking up, her mother had died, and her career seemed stalled. That summer she headed for Europe. Welles was in Italy at the time, and in the back of her mind she was dreaming of a reconciliation.
Rita stopped first at the French Riviera. Invitations poured in, particularly from wealthy men, for at the time she was considered the most beautiful woman in the world. Aristotle Onassis and the Shah of Iran telephoned her almost daily, begging for a date. She turned them all down. A few days after her arrival, though, she received an invitation from Elsa Maxwell, the society hostess, who was giving a little party in Cannes. Rita balked but Maxwell insisted, telling her to buy a new dress, show up a little late, and
make a grand entrance.
Rita played along, and arrived at the party wearing a white Grecian gown, her red hair falling over her bare shoulders. She was greeted by a reaction she had grown used to: all conversation stopped as both men and women turned in their chairs, the men gazing in amazement, the women jealous. A man hurried to her side and escorted her to her table. It was thirty-seven-year-old Prince Aly Khan, the son of the Aga Khan III, who was the worldwide leader of the Islamic Ismaili sect and one of the richest men in the world. Rita had been warned about Aly Khan, a notorious rake.
To her dismay, they were seated next to each other, and he never left her side. He asked her a million questionsโabout Hollywood, her interests, on and on. She began to relax a little and open up. There were other beautiful women there, princesses, actresses, but Aly Khan ignored them all, acting
as if Rita were the only woman there. He led her onto the dance floor, and though he was an expert dancer, she felt uncomfortableโhe held her a little too close. Still, when he offered to drive her back to her hotel, she agreed.
They sped along the Grande Corniche; it was a beautiful night. For one evening she had managed to forget her many problems, and she was grateful, but she was still in love with Welles, and an affair with a rake like Aly Khan was not what she needed.
Aly Khan had to fly off on business for a few days; he begged her to stay at the Riviera until he got back. While he was away, he telephoned constantly. Every morning a giant bouquet of flowers arrived. On the
telephone he seemed particularly annoyed that the Shah of Iran was trying hard to see her, and he made her promise to break the date to which she had finally agreed. During this time, a gypsy fortune-teller visited the hotel, and Rita agreed to have her fortune read. โYou are about to embark on the greatest romance of your life,โ the gypsy told her. โHe is somebody you already know You must relent and give in to him totally. Only if you do
that will you find happiness at long last.โ Not knowing who this man could be, Rita, who had a weakness for the occult, decided to extend her stay. Aly Khan came back; he told her that his chรขteau overlooking the Mediterranean was the perfect place to escape from the press and forget her troubles, and that he would behave himself. She relented. Life in the chรขteau was like a fairy tale; wherever she turned, his Indian helpers were
there to attend to her every wish. At night he would take her into his
enormous ballroom, where they would dance all by themselves. Could this be the man the fortune-teller meant?
ANNE: Didst thou not kill this king [Henry VI]? \ RICHARD: I grant ye.ย \ ANNE: And thou unfit
for any place, but hell. \ RICHARD: Yes, one place else, if you will hear me name it. \ ANNE: Some dungeon.ย \ย RICHARD: Your bedchamber. \ ANNE: III rest betide the chamber where thou liest! \ RICHARD: So will it, madam, till I lie with you.ย …ย But gentle Lady Anne.ย \Is not the causer of the
timeless deaths \ Of these Plantagenets, Henry and
Edward, \ As blameful as the executioner? \ ANNE: Thou wast the cause and most accursed effect. \ RICHARD: Your beauty was the cause of that effectโ\ Your beauty, that did haunt me in my sleep \ To undertake the death of all the world, \ So I might live one hour in your sweet bosom.
โWILLIAM SHAKESPEARE. THE TRAGEDY OF KING RICHARD III
My child, my sister, dream \ How sweet all things would seem \ Were we in that kind land to live
together, \ And there love slow and long, \ There
love and die among \ Those scenes that image you, that sumptuous weather. \ Drowned suns that
glimmer there \ Through cloud-dishevelled air \ Move me with such a mystery as appears \ Within
those other skies \ Of your treacherous eyes \ When I behold them shining through their tears, \ There, there is nothing else but grace and measure, \ Richness, quietness, and pleasure.ย \ See,
sheltered from the swells \ There in the still canals
\ Those drowsy ships that dream of sailing forth; \ It is to satisfy \ Your least desire, they ply \ Hither through all the waters of the earth. \ The sun at
close of day \ Clothes the fields of hay, \ Then the canals, at last the town entire \ In hyacinth and gold: \ Slowly the land is rolled \ Sleepward under a sea of gentle fire. \ There, there is nothing else but grace and measure, \ Richness, quietness, and pleasure.
โCHARLES BAUDELAIRE, โINVITATION TO THE VOYAGE,โ THE FLOWERS OF EVIL,
TRANSLATED BY RICHARD WILBUR
Aly Khan invited his friends over to meet her. Among this strange company she felt alone again, and depressed; she decided to leave the chรขteau. Just then, as if he had read her thoughts, Aly Khan whisked her off to Spain, the country that fascinated her most. The press caught on to the affair, and began to hound them in Spain: Rita had had a daughter with
Wellesโwas this any way for a mother to act? Aly Khanโs reputation did not help, but he stood by her, shielding her from the press as best he could. Now she was more alone than ever, and more dependent on him.
Near the end of the trip, Aly Khan proposed to Rita. She turned him down; she did not think he was the kind of man you married. He followed her to Hollywood, where her former friends were less friendly than before. Thank God she had Aly Khan to help her. A year later she finally succumbed, abandoning her career, moving to Aly Khanโs chรขteau, and marrying him.
Interpretation.ย Aly Khan, like a lot of men, fell in love with Rita Hayworth the moment he saw the filmย Gilda, in 1948. He made up his mind that he would seduce her somehow. The moment he heard she was coming to the Riviera, he got his friend Elsa Maxwell to lure her to the party and seat her next to him. He knew about the breakup of her marriage, and how
vulnerable she was. His strategy was to block out everything else in her worldโproblems, other men, suspicion of him and his motives, etc. His campaign began with the display of an intense interest in her lifeโconstant phone calls, flowers, gifts, all to keep him in her mind. He set up the fortune-teller to plant the seed. When she began to fall for him, he introduced her to his friends, knowing she would feel alienated among them, and therefore dependent on him. Her dependence was heightened by the trip to Spain, where she was on unfamiliar territory, besieged by reporters, and forced to cling to him for help. He slowly came to dominate her thoughts. Everywhere she turned, there he was. Finally she succumbed, out of weakness and the boost to her vanity that his attention represented.
Under his spell, she forgot about his horrid reputation, relinquishing the suspicions that were the only thing protecting her from him.
It was not Aly Khanโs wealth or looks that made him a great seducer. He was not in fact very handsome, and his wealth was more than offset by his bad reputation. His success was strategic: he isolated his victims, working so slowly and subtly that they did not notice it. The intensity of his attention made a woman feel that in his eyes, at that moment, she was the only woman in the world. This isolation was experienced as pleasure; the woman did not notice her growing dependence, how the way he filled up her mind with his attention slowly isolated her from her friends and her milieu. Her natural suspicions of the man were drowned out by his intoxicating effect on her ego. Aly Khan almost always capped off his seductions by taking the woman to some enchanted place on the globeโa place that he knew well, but where the woman felt lost.
Do not give your targets the time or space to worry about, suspect, or resist you. Flood them with the kind of attention that crowds out all other thoughts, concerns, and problems. Rememberโpeople secretly yearn to be led astray by someone who knows where they are going. It can be a
pleasure to let go, and even to feel isolated and weak, if the seduction is done slowly and gracefully.
Put them in a spot where they have no place to go, and they will die before fleeing.
โSUN-TZU
Keys to Seduction
The people around you may seem strong, and more or less in control of their lives, but that is merely a facade. Underneath, people are more brittle than they let on. What lets them seem strong is the series of nests and safety nets they envelop themselves inโtheir friends, their families, their daily routines, which give them a feeling of continuity, safety, and control.
Suddenly pull the rug out from under them, drop them alone into some foreign place where the familiar signposts are gone or scrambled, and you will see a very different person.
A target who is strong and settled is hard to seduce. But even the strongest people can be made vulnerable if you can isolate them from their nests and safety nets. Block out their friends and family with your constant presence, alienate them from the world they are used to, and take them to places they do not know Get them to spend time in your environment.
Deliberately disturb their habits, get them to do things they have never done. They will grow emotional, making it easier to lead them astray.
Disguise all this in the form of a pleasurable experience, and your targets will wake up one day distanced from everything that normally comforts them. Then they will turn to you for help, like a child crying out for its mother when the lights are turned out. In seduction, as in warfare, the isolated target is weak and vulnerable.
In Samuel Richardsonโsย Clarissa,ย written in 1748, the rake Lovelace is attempting to seduce the novelโs beautiful heroine. Clarissa is young, virtuous, and very much protected by her family. But Lovelace is a conniving seducer. First he courts Clarissaโs sister, Arabella. A match between them seems likely. Then he suddenly switches attention to Clarissa, playing on sibling rivalry to make Arabella furious. Their brother, James, is angered by Lovelaceโs change in sentiments; he fights with Lovelace and is wounded. The whole family is in an uproar, united against Lovelace, who, however, manages to smuggle letters to Clarissa, and to visit her when she
is at the house of a friend. The family finds out, and accuses her of disloyalty. Clarissa is innocent; she has not encouraged Lovelaceโs letters or visits. But now her parents are determined to marry her off, to a rich older man. Alone in the world, about to be married to a man she finds repulsive,
she turns to Lovelace as the only one who can save her from this mess. Eventually he rescues her by getting her to London, where she can escape this dreaded marriage, but where she is also hopelessly isolated. In these circumstances her feelings toward him soften. All of this has been masterfully orchestrated by Lovelace himselfโthe turmoil within the family, Clarissaโs eventual alienation from them, the whole scenario.
Your worst enemies in a seduction are often your targetsโ family and friends. They are outside your circle and immune to your charms; they may provide a voice of reason to the seduced. You must work silently and subtly to alienate the target from them. Insinuate that they are jealous of your targetโs good fortune in finding you, or that they are parental figures who
have lost a taste for adventure. The latter argument is extremely effective with young people, whose identities are in flux and who are more than ready to rebel against any authority figure, particularly their parents. You represent excitement and life; the friends and parents represent habit and boredom.
In Shakespeareโsย The Tragedy of King Richard III,ย Richard, when still the Duke of Gloucester, has murdered King Henry VI and his son, Prince Edward. Shortly thereafter he accosts Lady Anne, Prince Edwardโs widow, who knows what he has done to the two men closest to her, and who hates him as much as a woman can hate. Yet Richard attempts to seduce her. His method is simple: he tells her that what he did, he did because of his love for her. He wanted there to be no one in her life but him. His feelings were so strong he was driven to murder. Of course Lady Anne not only resists
this line of reasoning, she abhors him. But he persists. Anne is at a moment of extreme vulnerabilityโalone in the world, with no one to support her, at the height of grief. Incredibly, his words begin to have an effect.
Murder is not a seductive tactic, but the seducer does enact a kind of killingโa psychological one. Our past attachments are a barrier to the
present. Even people we have left behind can continue to have a hold on us. As a seducer you will be held up to the past, compared to previous suitors, perhaps found inferior.ย Do notย letย it get to that point.ย Crowd out the past with your attentions in the present. If necessary, find ways to disparage their previous loversโsubtly or not so subtly, depending on the situation. Even go so far as to open old wounds, making them feel old pain and seeing by contrast how much better the present is. The more you can isolate them from their past, the deeper they will sink with you into the present.
The principle of isolation can be taken literally by whisking the target off to an exotic locale. This was Aly Khanโs method; a secluded island worked best, and indeed islands, cut off from the rest of the world, have always been associated with the pursuit of sensual pleasures. The Roman Emperor Tiberius descended into debauchery once he made his home on the island of Capri. The danger of travel is that your targets are intimately exposed to youโit is hard to maintain an air of mystery. But if you take them to a
place alluring enough to distract them, you will prevent them from focusing on anything banal in your character. Cleopatra lured Julius Caesar into taking a voyage down the Nile. Moving deeper into Egypt, he was further
isolated from Rome, and Cleopatra was all the more seductive. The early- twentieth-century lesbian seductress Natalie Barney had an on-again-off- again affair with the poet Renรฉe Vivien; to regain her affections, she took Renรฉe on a trip to the island of Lesbos, a place Natalie had visited many times. In doing so she not only isolated Renรฉe but disarmed and distracted her with the associations of the place, the home of the legendary lesbian poet Sappho. Vivien even began to imagine that Natalie was Sappho herself. Do not take the target just anywhere; pick the place that will have the most effective associations.
The seductive power of isolation goes beyond the sexual realm. When new adherents joined Mahatma Gandhiโs circle of devoted followers, they were encouraged to cut off their ties with the pastโwith their family and
friends. This kind of renunciation has been a requirement of many religious sects over the centuries. People who isolate themselves in this way are much more vulnerable to influence and persuasion. A charismatic politician feeds off and even encourages peopleโs feelings of alienation. John F. Kennedy did this to great effect when he subtly disparaged the Eisenhower years; the comfort of the 1950s, he implied, compromised American ideals. He invited Americans to join him in a new life, on a โNew Frontier,โ full of danger and excitement. It was an extremely seductive lure, particularly for the young, who were Kennedyโs most enthusiastic supporters.
Finally, at some point in the seduction there must be a hint of danger in the mix. Your targets should feel that they are gaining a great adventure in following you, but are also losing somethingโa part of their past, their cherished comfort, Actively encourage these ambivalent feelings. An
element of fear is the proper spice; although too much fear is debilitating, in small doses it makes us feel alive. Like diving out of an airplane, it is exciting, a thrill, at the same time that it is a little frightening. And the only person there to break the fall, or catch them, is you.
Symbol:ย The Pied Piper A jolly fellow in his red and yellow cloak, he lures the children from their homes with the delightful sounds of his flute. Enchanted, they do not notice how far they are walking,
how they are leaving their families behind. They do not even notice the cave he eventually leads them into, and which closes upon them forever.
Reversal
The risks of this strategy are simple: isolate someone too quickly and you will induce a sense of panic that may end up in the targetโs taking flight. The isolation you bring must be gradual, and disguised as pleasureโthe pleasure of knowing you, leaving the world behind. In any case, some
people are too fragile to be cut off from their base of support. The great modern courtesan Pamela Harriman had a solution to this problem: she isolated her victims from their families, their former or present wives, and in place of those old connections she quickly set up new comforts for her lovers. She overwhelmed them with attention, attending to their every need. In the case of Averill Harriman, the billionaire who eventually married her, she literally established a new home for him, one that had no associations with the past and was full of the pleasures of the present. It is unwise to keep the seduced dangling in midair for too long, with nothing familiar or comforting in sight. Instead, replace the familiar things you have cut them off from with a new home, a new series of comforts.
Phase Three
The PrecipiceโDeepening the Effect Through Extreme Measures
The goal in this phase is to make everything deeperโthe effect you have on their mind, feelings of love and attachment, tension within your victims. With your hooks deep into them, you can then push
them back and forth, between hope and despair, until they weaken and snap. Showing how far you are willing to go for your victims, doing some noble or chivalrous deed (16: Prove yourself) will
create a powerful jolt, spark an intensely positive reaction.
Everyone has scars, repressed desires, and unfinished business from childhood. Bring these desires and wounds to the surface, make
your victims feel they are getting what they never got as a child and you will penetrate deep into their psyche, stir uncontrollable
emotions (17: Effect a regression). Now you can take your victims past their limits, getting them to act out their dark sides, adding a
sense of danger to your seduction (18: Stir up the transgressive and taboo).
You need to deepen the spell, and nothing will more confuse and enchant your victims than giving your seduction a spiritual veneer. It is not lust that motivates you, but destiny, divine thoughts and everything elevated (19: Use spiritual lures). The erotic lurks beneath the spiritual. Now your victims have been properly set up. By deliberately hurting them, instilling fears and anxieties, you will lead them to the edge of the precipice from which it will be easy to push and make them fall (20: Mix pleasure with pain). They feel
great tension and are yearning for relief.