Graham Greene on a
Burnt-Out Case:

Šhttp://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/images/n0/n561.jpg
I went to
Success is more dangerous than failure (the ripples
break over a wider coast line), and The
Heart of the Matter was a success in the great vulgar sense of that
term. There must have been something corrupt there, for the book appealed too
often to weak elements in its readers. Never had I received so many letters
from strangers -- perhaps the majority of them from women and priests. At a
stroke I found myself regarded as a Catholic author in
...This account may seem cynical and unfeeling, but in
the years between The Heart of the Matter
and The End of the Affair
I felt myself used and exhausted by the victims of religion. The vision of
faith as untroubled sea was lost for ever; faith was more like a tempest in
which the lucky were engulfed and lost, and the unfortunate survived to be
flung battered and bleeding on the shore. A better man could have found a
life's work on the margin of that cruel sea, but my own course of life gave me
no confidence in any aid I might proffer. I had no apostolic mission, and the
cries for spiritual assistance maddened me because of my impotence. What was
the Church for but to aid these sufferers? What was the priesthood for? I was
like a man without medical knowledge in a village struck with plague. It was in
those years, I think, that Querry was born, and
Father Thomas too. He had often sat in that chair of mine, and he had worn many
faces.
from Ways of
Escape, pp.215-218