OUR PURPOSE IN LIFE 129 he has chosen is sparsely populated, and it has lonely stretches on it. He can do no otherwise, for this Divine Spark has awakened within him a surety of purpose, and there is no going back, for once he has seen the light, darkness can never be so black, for there is the remem- brance of that light, even if it is shadowed for awhile. He cannot join in the pettinesses and frivolities of the world around him. The one who has not caught a glimpse of the purpose of life has altogether another vision, to him life is a sporting ground of pleasure for himself, to amass money, to seek pleasures, to gather gains, to enjoy life, to get on, these are his aims, and they are all centred in himself. It is true that he may do kindnesses on the way, but the kindness to others is subsidiary to his struggle for self enjoyment. That is the great difference, and if one had to go, it would be the thought of others that would be pushed out in the struggle for his personal self. To this class belong also all those who have scarcely a thought beyond animal pleasure. It sometimes appears that these last are slipping back, but in reality it is not so, for there is never a man in whom the Divine Spark is dead or even totally eclipsed, and in the apparently most depraved lie the same