Cherry explains to Ponyboy that there was a side of Bob that not everybody saw that made you want to follow him. Ponyboy knew that she saw this in Dally, and that was why she was afraid to see him and love him.
Ponyboy believes Dally takes Johnny's death so hard because Johnny represented the innocence and hope that Dally had long lost. Johnny was one of the few people who understood Dally and connected with him on a deeper emotional level. Dally's protective nature towards Johnny made his death feel like a personal loss, intensifying his feelings of despair and hopelessness. This devastation ultimately drives Dally to his tragic end.
When Dally tells Ponyboy and Johnny not to pick up his bad habits, he is warning them against emulating his negative behaviors and actions. Dally likely recognizes that his own behavior is risky and potentially harmful, and he does not want his friends to follow in his footsteps. By advising them not to pick up his bad habits, Dally is trying to protect Ponyboy and Johnny from making the same mistakes he has made.
Well first of all the name is Johnny Cade, not Johnny Cymbal. Johnny died in a hospital. The cause of his death were major burns. Johnny and Ponyboy helped save a bunch of little kids from burning in the old church in Windrixville that caught on fire. Ponyboy made it out okay, but Johnny got a burning piece of the ceiling fall on him. He got paralyzed from the waste down and had very severe burns all over his body. Dally dragged him out and the ambulance brought Johnny, Dally, and Ponyboy to the hospital. The day of the rumble, the next day, Johnny died when Ponyboy and Dally came to visit him after the rumble was over.
tell why pony and johnny end up sitting next to marcia and cherry
It means Ponyboy likes his world of heros and sunsets, but it's like living in a dream. Dally is similar to the world, cold and hard, because the world isn't a happy place for the greasers. The reality is that there is no sunsets or happiness, there's just problems and poverty, and that's why Dally scares Ponyboy.
Cherry explains to Ponyboy that there was a side of Bob that not everybody saw that made you want to follow him. Ponyboy knew that she saw this in Dally, and that was why she was afraid to see him and love him.
When Dally tells Ponyboy and Johnny not to pick up his bad habits, he is warning them against emulating his negative behaviors and actions. Dally likely recognizes that his own behavior is risky and potentially harmful, and he does not want his friends to follow in his footsteps. By advising them not to pick up his bad habits, Dally is trying to protect Ponyboy and Johnny from making the same mistakes he has made.
Well first of all the name is Johnny Cade, not Johnny Cymbal. Johnny died in a hospital. The cause of his death were major burns. Johnny and Ponyboy helped save a bunch of little kids from burning in the old church in Windrixville that caught on fire. Ponyboy made it out okay, but Johnny got a burning piece of the ceiling fall on him. He got paralyzed from the waste down and had very severe burns all over his body. Dally dragged him out and the ambulance brought Johnny, Dally, and Ponyboy to the hospital. The day of the rumble, the next day, Johnny died when Ponyboy and Dally came to visit him after the rumble was over.
tell why pony and johnny end up sitting next to marcia and cherry
he doesn't like him and thinks that he doesn't care about anyone, and people like Dally were what made people think that greasers were no better than hoods. but dallys smart and you got to respect him.BUT ALSOHe believes that Dally is a beautiful person but simply does not know how to express his feelings in a positive manner. This is why he gets in trouble and helps them run away; he views PonyBoy and his best friend as the problems in his life and sets them free to be out on their own. This was symbolism; this was showing that Dally wanted his problems to run away from him, since he feared that he himself could not outrun them. After this, he became depressed. He went over to a police officer and handed him all the money he had and said, "At the end of this book, I'm going to pull out an unloaded gun and I want you to shoot me. Make sure you do this at the very end of this book, or I will be unhappy." The officer carried out Dally's will, but he also took all of the money in Dally's name and became a wanted thief. He coincidentally ran into Ponyboy on a train, and Ponyboy was all, "Oh yes yes. Hop-a-hop on the train. We are on the fail train of life woo WOO." The officer stared deep into Ponyboy's eyes, and there was an instant connection. Later on the officer became Ponyboy's adopted father. However, 20 years later their father-son relationship came to an end when Ponyboy stated these words: "You know, I dislike pigs. However, I really do enjoy good bacon." The officer took offence and sent Ponyboy to a rehab clinic where he met Dally, who was like, "Ahahah y'all suckas thought I was gone but I not and I does be rollin' in a benz." Ponyboy had officially gone crazy, and decided he was in the movie Inception, and that he had to jump out of a window to wake up from his dream, which resulted in his premature demise. The End.
After Dally finally showed up after about four days, the church that they were staying at in Windrixville caught on fire, and there were kids on a field trip by the church. Some of them got trapped in there (I don't know why they'd be in there in the first place), and Ponyboy and Johnny decided to save them. After they got all the kids out (Dally finally decided to help and was helping lifting the kids out of the window, outside the church), Ponyboy managed to get out in time, but a burning piece of timber fell on Johnny and broke his back. He made it to the hospital, but after a day, he died after uttering his last, (famous) words to Ponyboy: "Stay gold, Ponyboy, stay gold..." Dally was crushed and totally blew up (since Johnny was the only thing he had ever loved), and ended up dying as well.
In the Outsiders, Pony describes Dally as being a person who made a difference on pg. 154, by talking about how Dally saved Johnny. He also mentions all that Dally risked to help Pony and Johnny, even though it was putting himself at risk.
In the Outsiders, Pony describes Dally as being a person who made a difference on pg. 154, by talking about how Dally saved Johnny. He also mentions all that Dally risked to help Pony and Johnny, even though it was putting himself at risk.
In the Outsiders, Pony describes Dally as being a person who made a difference on pg. 154, by talking about how Dally saved Johnny. He also mentions all that Dally risked to help Pony and Johnny, even though it was putting himself at risk.
Ponyboy believes that other Greasers will end up like Dally because of how they look at life, and how they take it: violent and desperate. Ponyboy also believes this because of Johnny’s death and Dally’s death, they might start hating themselves and blaming themselves for their deaths.
The Outsiders movie and The Outsiders book are both alike and different in many ways. The movie adaptation was made in 1983. The book was first published in the 1967. One way is that the book starts off with Ponyboy leaving the movie theaters, while the movie starts off with him walking through town with Johny and Dally. Another is that the book is in first person point of view. The movie isn't narrated, so it is not in first person point of view. Also, in the book, Sodapop and Dally are supposed to be blonde, but in the movie they are both brunettes. In the movie, the church wasn't on a hill. In the book, the church was on the top of a hill in Windrixville. Even though the book and movie are different, they are alike in many ways as well. The movie has all of Pony's gang members, Soda, Darry, Johny, Dally, Two-bit, Steve, and Pony, just like the book. Both Dally and Johny die in both the movie and the book.