A place such as a graveyard (all of them, to be exact) can seem very gloomy and lifeless to the untrained eye, but there's more to it. What you see when you look into a graveyard is the surface and that's all it is. It's not what's above, it's what's below. The surface is simply a disguise and all sorts of unknown things happen below.
Life, on the other hand, goes by the way it has been for all of eternity. The dead seem to be forgotten and by nightfall, the grave comes alive. No dead rising or anything, it's all earthly internal. Ghosts (shapeless beings) "call forth to be one with them"....they rot and become eternal through that process. All of this is at the "selfish request of a treacherous host". Some individual being of some sort is demanding all of this and witnessing it firsthand.
"Everything does take life, even the earth must feed." I believe that that statement means that even though death is seen as the end-all to everything, it's actually a creator of something new afterwards. The ending of ones life somehow feeds something else needing death.
Somehow, the eating of corpses is involved and "there is no turning back". It all comes to an end (possibly by sunrise or some other sort of timeshift) and the same thing'll happen by the next night....all while being unknown by what goes on above ground.
Amazing song, along with all of the others, but this one truly sticks out well.
A place such as a graveyard (all of them, to be exact) can seem very gloomy and lifeless to the untrained eye, but there's more to it. What you see when you look into a graveyard is the surface and that's all it is. It's not what's above, it's what's below. The surface is simply a disguise and all sorts of unknown things happen below.
Life, on the other hand, goes by the way it has been for all of eternity. The dead seem to be forgotten and by nightfall, the grave comes alive. No dead rising or anything, it's all earthly internal. Ghosts (shapeless beings) "call forth to be one with them"....they rot and become eternal through that process. All of this is at the "selfish request of a treacherous host". Some individual being of some sort is demanding all of this and witnessing it firsthand.
"Everything does take life, even the earth must feed." I believe that that statement means that even though death is seen as the end-all to everything, it's actually a creator of something new afterwards. The ending of ones life somehow feeds something else needing death.
Somehow, the eating of corpses is involved and "there is no turning back". It all comes to an end (possibly by sunrise or some other sort of timeshift) and the same thing'll happen by the next night....all while being unknown by what goes on above ground.
Amazing song, along with all of the others, but this one truly sticks out well.