'Puff the Magic Dragon, lived by the sea, And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called Honalee' sang Peter, Paul and Mary in a 1963 recording. Well, here is the song presented in storybook style with absolutely delightful paintings by Eric Puybaret.
It is a story of an ageless dragon, Puff, and his playmate Jackie Paper, a little boy who 'loved that rascal Puff' and bought him presents as they 'frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called Honalee'.
Despite Puff's gigantic tail they managed to travel on a boat 'with billowed sail', visiting noble kings and princes, who 'bowed whene'er they came' and pirate ships, which would 'lower their flag when Puff roared out his name'.
They certainly had fun but then Jackie grew up and 'came no more' so Puff sadly 'ceased his fearless roar' and 'his head was bent in sorrow, green scales fell like rain' as he ceased to play 'along the cherry lanes'.
Puff was so sad, as is the reader, that 'without his lifelong friend', he could 'not be brave' and he 'slipped into his cave'. But then he was cheered up by the arrival of a young lady who became his friend and once more 'Puff, the magic dragon, lived by the sea, And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called Honalee'. Happiness once again!
At the conclusion of the tale, Peter Yarrow (the Peter of Peter, Paul and Mary) tells how fans have told him how the song moved them as children, often making them cry, and how they have sung it to their own children and grandchildren in later times. He explains that he 'loves the spirit of Honalee's gentleness, which offers rest and peace to all who come to know it' and how that spirit is reflected in the beautiful illustrations in the book ... and it certainly is.
There is also a short note by Lenny Lipton, the then 19-year-old Cornell University student on whose poem the song was based. And Lipton was inspired by an Ogden Nash poem titled 'Custard the Dragon', which was, in true Nashian-style, about a 'realio, trulio little pet dragon'. He also tells an interesting story about being on the Hawaiian island of Kauai with his family and friends when they came across a gigantic lava cave on the edge of Hanalei Bay.
This raised the question from one of his friends as to why he had set 'Puff the Magic Dragon' there. Lipton told him that he had never heard of Hanalei when he wrote the poem and he had no idea that it had a cave fit for a dragon!
He added that there were many what-ifs along the way to 'Puff' for he had left the poem in Peter Yarrow's typewriter and Peter added some new lyrics and turned it into a song. He says that he could so easily have taken that piece of paper away with him and Peter might never have seen it, adding also that if Peter hadn't met Paul and Mary it was probable that nobody would have ever heard of Puff.
We probably all agree that if that had been the case, the world would have missed something special and been a sadder place for that.