I like both the Dalai Lama and the pwn little world interpretations, but am I the only one who first just thought it was about losing land...literally.
@craniifer Nope, that's my interpretation as well. He was exiled from his homeland for a crime he did not commit ("My own land has closed it's gates on me/I am here to prove you wrong/I'm accused of something I live for") and he returns from exile to find that the usurpers who framed him have ruined the place.
@craniifer Nope, that's my interpretation as well. He was exiled from his homeland for a crime he did not commit ("My own land has closed it's gates on me/I am here to prove you wrong/I'm accused of something I live for") and he returns from exile to find that the usurpers who framed him have ruined the place.
I like both the Dalai Lama and the pwn little world interpretations, but am I the only one who first just thought it was about losing land...literally.
@craniifer Nope, that's my interpretation as well. He was exiled from his homeland for a crime he did not commit ("My own land has closed it's gates on me/I am here to prove you wrong/I'm accused of something I live for") and he returns from exile to find that the usurpers who framed him have ruined the place.
@craniifer Nope, that's my interpretation as well. He was exiled from his homeland for a crime he did not commit ("My own land has closed it's gates on me/I am here to prove you wrong/I'm accused of something I live for") and he returns from exile to find that the usurpers who framed him have ruined the place.