This is just a silly thread, or deadly serious depending on how you look at it of course.

So... I'm listening to and trying to replicate Dink's Song (Fare Thee Well). It's a fantastic song. I love the feel, the emotion and the way it changes slightly in unexpected ways.
Now the lyrics have me a little puzzled. The second verse in the movie version, played in Inside Llewyn Davis, is:
The woman I loved, is long and tall
She moves her body, like a cannonball
Fare the well, oh honey, fare thee well.
My big questions to you all. Is moving like a cannonball a GOOD thing? ... Or perhaps part of the reason for the "fare thee well"? I can't decide. I'm singing it like I love how cannonballs move... But should I? From memory this was originally written by a woman, so perhaps she was singing to a man. Would that have made moving like a cannon ball more desirable? Hmmmm... I'm not sure... But then... i may just be a little out of touch. :woohoo:


To be clear...I'm not sure I'd want my man to move like a cannonball either. Sounds sort of menacing and violent.
Thoughts?
Got any other gems that the community might unravel the meaning of?
Yep I'm just being stupid of course. But it is curious.