“The greatest, save one.”

“What would be the greatest?”

“To curse God.”

“The next?”

“To murder.”

The other’s whole manner changed on the instant. He was no longer the stern Churchman, the inveterate friend of Justice, the prejudiced priest, rigid in a pious convention, who could neither bend nor break. The sin of an infidel breaker of the law, that was one thing; the crime of a son of the Church, which a human soul came to relate in its agony, that was another. He had a crass sense of justice, but there was in him a deeper thing still: the revelation of the human soul, the responsibility of speaking to the heart which has dropped the folds of secrecy, exposing the skeleton of truth, grim and staring, to the eye of a secret earthly mentor.

“If it has been hidden all these years, why do you tell it now, my son?”

“It is the only way.”

“Why was it hidden?”

“I have come to confess,” answered the man bitterly. The priest looked at him anxiously. “You have spoken rightly, my son. I am not here to ask, but to receive.”