The Genius, by Margaret Horton 
Potter 
 
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Title: The Genius 
Author: Margaret Horton Potter 
 
Release Date: July 5, 2007 [eBook #22004] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
GENIUS*** 
E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Project Gutenberg Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) 
 
THE GENIUS
by 
MARGARET POTTER 
Author of "The House of De Mailly" "Istar of Babylon" Etc. Etc. 
 
London and New York Harper & Brothers Publishers 1906 Copyright, 
1906, by Harper & Brothers. All rights reserved. Published March, 
1906. 
 
TO MY BROTHER EDWARD CLEMENT POTTER 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAP. PAGE 
Prologue 3 I. The Czar's Ball 8 II. Michael 26 III. The Gregoriev Heir 
42 IV. The Corps of Cadets 60 V. Death Joy 75 VI. Nathalie 90 VII. 
Spring and the Rose 105 VIII. In Camp 126 IX. "Half-gods Go" 156 X. 
Self-Destiny 184 XI. The Moscow Conservatoire 202 XII. The Gods 
Arrive 226 XIII. Student's Folly 255 XIV. The Third Section 272 XV. 
Engulfment 285 XVI. Joseph 302 XVII. Heritage 319 VIII. Joseph the 
Sower 337 XIX. His Harvest 353 XX. Madame Féodoreff 364 XXI. 
Tosca Regnant 381 XXII. The Lion 400 XXIII. The Hermit 427 
Epilogue 446 
 
THE GENIUS 
THEMA 
Hark, ye Great, that withdraw yourselves from the Multitude! 
Loneliness is written for your word. Alone shall ye strive to solve the 
riddle of Creation.
Seek ye help of them that have gone before? Ye shall find it not. Dream 
ye of sympathy, of praise, from those that watch your work to-day? 
They shall give ye rather mockery. Finally, would ye leave to your 
children legacies of wisdom that shall be as gold unto them? Lo! Such 
desire, also, must be vain. 
Dowered of Vision, Power or Wantonness, ye shall not escape this 
scourge of Fate. Alone shall ye cut your way through the rock of 
Destiny up to the High Place of Restitution. Yea! Solitary shall your 
labor be. But out of solitude cometh, in good time, that Understanding 
of the Law that all, at last, must seek--and find. 
 
THE GENIUS 
PROLOGUE 
THE ANNUNCIATION 
In the Western world of the revised calendar it was the evening of 
January twelfth. In Russia it was New Year's night, of the year 1840. 
The year was twenty-three hours old; for the bells of the three churches 
in Klin had just chimed eleven times. But in "Maidonovo," a 
country-place of the Gregorievs just outside the town, the mistress of 
the house, Princess Sophia, had not yet gone to bed. She had been alone 
in her bedroom for some time, and was now on her knees before a little 
shrine presided over by a great, golden ikon, with its flaring colors, and 
stiff, Byzantine figures of Mary and the infant Christ. There, before the 
World-Mother, knelt the loneliest of unhappy women: daughter of an 
old, impoverished Muscovite house, and wife, by necessity, of Michael 
Gregoriev, a man of millions, chief of the Third Section in Moscow: an 
official after the heart of the Iron Czar, and of Satan, his master, too. 
For nearly an hour the Princess had knelt on a heavily rugged floor, her 
eyes lifted to the face of the Virgin, her lips revealing, in those 
whispers that had become part of her life, the ever-living anguish of her 
heart. She was in her thirty-third year, poor creature: had known now
sixteen years of married life--sixteen years of revelation, of repulsion 
mental and physical, of misery not to be told. One by one her little 
illusions, fancies, hopes, and, with them, all the graces of her youth, 
had fallen from her, till there remained but a shadowy, faded creature, 
holding, in the depths of her bruised soul, just one more desire, one 
final hope, of which the very possibility was by this time all but 
extinguished. 
Yet it was of this hope she was speaking to-night to that distant, 
shadowy Mary, who, her confessor had told her, can always understand 
and always pity. Here, in the chill silence of her lonely rooms, while 
the wide world without grew stiller and more still under its pale 
covering, the wife had gathered her last resolution together, and dared a 
demand of those High Immortals whose contact with humanity had 
ended so long ago. They had hitherto been pitiless enough with her; 
though this she would scarcely acknowledge even in her feeble 
rebellion. But she should ask them, at last, to make her a tardy 
restitution. 
Sophia    
    
		
	
	
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