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“I went on walking home, thinking about the movie, and then suddenly wishing I had some company. Greasers can’t walk alone much or they’ll get jumped” (S.E. Hinton 2). Thus resulting that Ponyboy is left unsupervised by Darry, when Darry could have have came and picked him up. For the most part Darry knows what could happen to Ponyboy but dosen’t bother to even go out and look for him. “Our front door is unlocked incase one of the boys is hacked off at his parents and needs a place to stay” (S.E. Hinton 105).
Johnny is loyal and would sacrifice his reputation to save Ponyboy’s life. Darry, one of Ponyboy’s brothers goes to work everyday to earn money for the people he loves, he does this so that his brothers could all be one family. Toghether they make it through anything. 2.) Paragraph one Ponyboy is a good person with a caring heart.
That shows the reader how Ponyboy reacted to Darry’s action. In the end, Ponyboy realizes how much his brother really loves him. Ponyboy realizes this when Darry shows up to the hospital and starts crying when he sees Ponyboy 98. “Darry did care about me, maybe as much as he cared about Soda, and because he cared he was trying too hard to make something for me.” (98).
There are reasons that show that Ponyboy cares about Darry. In the novel it is stated “Soda , did i ask for darry while i was sick? Yeah sure, he said looking at me strangely. You asked for him and me both. Oh i thought maybe i didn’t ask for darry.
Ponyboy has been gone from Darry, his older brother for about 6 days because they were hiding from the police after Johnny murdered a Soc. They ended up running into a burning church to save children from burning to death and after that they ended up in the hospital from their injuries. Ponyboy thinks that Darry doesn't like him and just wants him to be gone. When Darry sees ponyboy in the hospital, he starts to cry. Ponyboy has never seen Darry cry, not even at his parent’s funeral.
In fact, Soda tells Pony “‘you don't realize all Darry's giving up just to give you a chance he missed out on. He could have stuck you in a home somewhere and worked his way through college’” (150). Darry gives up his chance at a bright future so that Ponyboy can live his own successful life. As the captain of the school football team with an athletic scholarship, Darry has his whole life ahead of him, but he gives it all up for his brothers.
Ponyboy becomes less afraid of Darry when he realizes that Darry actually does love him. After Ponyboy gets to see Darry when he is taken to the hospital because of the church fire, Darry is standing outside waiting for him. On page 96 Ponyboy writes, Suddenly I realized, horrified, that Darry was crying... Darry did care about me, maybe as much as he cared about Soda. Ponyboy also becomes less afraid of Darry when he starts fighting back when Darry yells at him.
First, when Ponyboy was talking to Sherry and Marcia, they asked about Darry and why they haven’t seen him in school since their parents died, Ponyboy responds, “He’s a dropout” because he works full time to provide for their family (Coppola).The fact that Darry is still a kid, but was forced to dropout of school so that he could take the place of his parents and take care of his siblings, shows that although there were many negative effects of the death of Dally’s parents, it also made him step up and become more responsible. Viewers can see that the death of Darry’s parents made him more independent and self-sufficient, but it also reveals that Darry never got to fully grow up and was forced to put his life on pause so that he could help his family, which could affect his success in the future. Moreover, later in the film, when the Socs and the Greasers are preparing to fight, Darry is face to face with one of the Socs and they say hi to each other as the narrator explains that “they used to buddy around, play football” (Coppola). This narration exposes to readers that before Darry’s parents died, he was becoming successful because he did many sports and even played sports with the Socs, meaning he may have been really good at them. However, when his parents passed away, he was forced to put all of his success to a stop so
42). After this, Ponyboy reveals that "Johnny was the gang's pet" (p. 14). He was “everyone's kid brother” (p. 14) because “his father was always beating him up and, his mother ignored him” (p. 14). Without the gang “Johnny would never have known what love and affection are” (p. 14). So, the gang made sure to take care of him.
A Better Life for Ponyboy In the Novel, The Outsiders Ponyboys brothers may care for him but he’s not living a good lifestyle and is surrounded by bad influences therefore he would be better off in the system. This is proof that Ponyboy should be put into the system and taken out of the care of Darry. He would be better off in the system because, Darry has been shown to be not a responsible guardian.
He could take anything. It was Johnny I was worried about.” He knows how frightened and anxious Johnny is after being jumped and how he is not as tough as the rest of the Greasers. Especially without a loving family at home, Johnny only has the gang and is not able to take as much. Throughout the whole novel, Ponyboy expresses how much he cares for others both with Johnny, and
I think the reason Darry pushes Ponyboy so hard was because he never got to fulfill the scholarship he won, and he wants Ponyboy to get that opportunity he missed. This is really a very touching act, because he tries so hard to make sure Ponyboy doesn’t have to work at a gas station or roof houses like Soda or Darry. Throughout the book, Darry pushes Ponyboy to do very well. Once, he went a little too far and thereupon Ponyboy witnessed a murder and fled. Darry couldn't get over himself after Ponyboy left: “Kid, you ought to see Darry.
This shows how he gained back his self-confidence and his ability to stand up for himself. Johnny finally found his acceptance from Dally when Dally said, “We’re all so proud of you” (148). When Dally said that Ponyboy noticed Johnny’s eyes glowing, “Dally was proud of him... That was all he ever wanted” (148). In the letter he wrote to Ponyboy, “It’s worth saving those kids...
Research shows that small protests will likely be unsuccessful because there is not enough power to change but I claim that small protests can be more successful than bigger protest. Smaller protest can bring people to their side. An example would be a famous person going on a hunger strike because they disagree with the government’s policies. How would you react? Probably by helping them or being on their side because they are famous.
Johnny shows Ponyboy that the world isn’t corrupt with mean people and that it is still full of good. Johnny stated in the note Ponyboy found in the book Gone With The Wild that it is was worth saving the kids even if it meant his life. He also stated that the poem in the book meant “He meant you’re gold when you’re a kid,like green… and don’t get bugged over being a greaser. You still have a lot of time to make yourself be what you want. There’s still lots of good in the world” (Hinton 178-9).