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THROUGHOUT THE NOVELS of Graham Greene, a distinguishing trait of his characters is their ambiguity. Not only is the reader uncertain what to make of these cunningly-drawn fictional persons; the characters themselves tread an internal moral tightrope, and hardly know what to make of themselves. Greene's world is of shadows, suspicion, doubt, fears of betrayal; of indirection, hints, whispers, hidden motives. All these elements of chaos whirl about within minds which frequently are of superior moral or spiritual perception, but the ambiguity remains.
Among the huge acquaintance of my long lifetime, I knew only two native-born Australians who fully qualified to hold ...
Source: HighBeam Research, A fourth man?(writers)