The older I get, the more profoundly sad I find Puff The Magic Dragon to be. Yes, I know you can find a pot metaphor in there. Some people think it's about Vietnam. But if you listen to it and take at face value as you move through middle age (which, let's be honest, is an optimistic term at best at my stage of life), the song is nothing more than a gut punch about innocence and childhood lost.
I suppose as time moves on, I realize there's no return to the Autumn mist of Honahlee. Those shores and its memories grow more and more distant with each passing year.
What really gets me, though, is having a kid who is still very much able to visit that land and frolic there carefree as can be. But I know that one day he too will sail away never to return to play along that cherry lane. And it's heartbreaking in a way. We want our kids to be able to stay on that lovely isle, but we know they can't. The world won't let them, and they're not even going to want to stay there, because of human nature.
But you know, there's also this. Sometimes I'm not convinced we are all just Jackie Paper, moving on to finding other toys. Sometimes I think we are all Puff, retreating into our caves, heads bent in sorrow, as the world moves on and away, and we lose the bravery to scream our fearless roars.
For a time.
Dragons, by their nature, don't stay sad forever. They eventually burst from their caves and fly majestically through the air. Then a tertiary character shows up and pops them with an arrow based on the advice of a bird. I'm not sure where I'm heading with this, the point is that Tolkien should have let a major character kill Smaug, instead of a random guy named Bard. I mean, seriously.