Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-8921787-20130616221824/@comment-6512-20130616223833

Ahh, sorry. Here, let me explain a little better.

"A wise man denied his homeland" suggests he's been denied it by someone/thing else. Maybe he's someone who's been physically kicked out of his homeland. The way you suggested it ("a wise man WHO denied his homeland") suggests that he denied it himself, leaving his own country and refusing to be a part of it.

I'm unsure why the word "denied" isn't capitalized (it should be, in all honesty), so it could very well be a hint at something. That, or whomever wrote out the titles for each character simply felt like denied didn't need to be capitalized...