>>537779732
And throughout the song, she constantly references a 'You' that she is looking for, not just the planet. She wants to teleport through dimensions to meet with someone, and the majority of the song is about her relentless efforts to do so.
>Better have a cake awaitin' there for me.
>I'm holdin' on and headin' straight for you.
>To the next town over, I board a twinklin' star, oh! I'm holdin' on and takin' flight with you.
>There'll be so much apple pie that we just can't eat it all.
Boarding stars, eating cake and apple pie, who else could she be searching for?
Why do the things she describe in her song sound familiar to us? This is because she, like us, also follows Kirby's journey. Her prophetic dreams all follow Kirby's footsteps, eons ahead of her own. She's dreaming of Kirby, she wants to fly in the skies and eat delicious food with the object of her dreams.
Long, long ago, in ages past, there was someone who dearly wanted to meet with him. Neichel is the friend that Kirby has never met, separated by millions of years.
If we take into account that she could know Kirby's journey well, then the unfinished song can be interpreted as a message, with every 'You' directly speaking to him.
In the 'Welcome to the New World' a sequence of lines is
>Fresh spring breeze!
>Adventure is awaiting you in the fields of a—
>Open hearts already fluttering free and riding the breeze.
THAT IS NOT A COMMON SAYING
THAT ISN'T A FFGRR GRRRRRR THAT IS GRRRRRR THAT IS A VERY SPECIFIC TURN OF PHRASE
"Here comes our hero, Kirby, riding in on the spring breeze."
Look. I'd say that she's the narrator but I'll just content myself instead with saying that I'd say it instead of actually saying it.
Also, isn't it fitting that the land of an ancient clairvoyant's dreams was literally called Dreamland? Oh my god.