How does dally feel about helping people




















Similarly Johnny is a hero because he used his heroic qualities to help people. The most important symbols used in the Outsiders are Two-Bit's prized switchblade, Bob's rings and the greaser hairstyle. Two-Bit's Switchblade. His most prized possession, the switchblade is representative of a strong disregard for authority — something the greasers regularly ignore. Bob's Rings.

The Greaser Hairstyle. Two - Bit's switchblade is his most prized possession and, in several ways, represents the disregard for authority for which greasers traditionally pride themselves. First of all, the blade is stolen. Second, it represents a sense of the individual power that comes with the potential to commit violence. She says that the Socs have agreed to fight with no weapons.

Ponyboy asks her to go see Johnny , but she says she cannot because Johnny killed Bob. Ponyboy calls her a traitor, but he quickly forgives her. By the end of the novel, the boys apply this idea to youthful innocence , believing that they cannot remain forever unsullied by the harsh realities of life.

Here, Johnny urges Ponyboy to remain gold, or innocent. Two -Bit explains the greasers ' two main rules : always stick together and never get caught. Cherry and Ponyboy go to get popcorn, and Ponyboy tells her about the time the Socs beat up Johnny. The leader of the gang that beat him, Ponyboy says, wore a fistful of rings. Why is Dally loyal? Category: books and literature fiction. One reason why the teenagers in this novel are loyal to their gang is for protection.

Get smart and nothing can touch you. Get tough. Get smart. Control your feelings. That Is Valiant. Entering: Philosophy. Stay Gold.

We have to care. Or, we should care. If anything, the world needs more kind-hearted people. Nothing Gold Can Stay? Hinton, S. The Outsiders. New York, Penguin Group, Rebecca Blyakher. More Stories. Opinion Politics Sociology. Ponyboy speaks these words in Chapter 5, during his stay with Johnny in the abandoned church in Windrixville. He says earlier that the other greasers—Soda, Darry, and Two-Bit—remind him more of the heroes in his books than Dally does.

Ponyboy feels more comfortable with Soda, Darry, and Two-Bit because as a narrator, and later a writer, he is more comfortable with fictional heroes than with real people like Dally who have lost their innocence. Johnny, on the other hand, though quieter and more timid than Ponyboy, finds it in himself to admire Dally and to look past his intimidating exterior. Johnny sits beside Ponyboy and pats him gently as Ponyboy weeps.

In this moment, Johnny shows a tender, sensitive, and emotional side, as well as the depth of friendship and loyalty he gives to and shares with Ponyboy. Johnny offers this bit of twisted logic in an attempt to comfort Ponyboy who has been hit by Darry. Johnny poses this question to Dally as a way of explaining why he wants to confess to murdering Bob. Johnny wants peace.



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