"Stay gold Ponyboy. Stay gold....." (< those were Johnny's last words)
I hate life
He did not want pony to be a fighter and a rough person. He wanted him to stay the way he was. Gold.
I know he's not real but what i mean was what is the pearson who play Ponyboy what is his birthday
well later on in the book, Ponyboy finds a letter in the book Gone with the Wind and it said that he was gold meaning he wasn't like any other person. he was his own self and he never followed what others did. he looked at the other side of the situation and he wasn't a big juvenile delinquent. basicly, he told him to be himself and show others that its okay, like showing dally the sunset
He want something
I hate life
I personally think Johnny's last words "Stay gold Pony, stay gold." meant that he didn't want Ponyboy to change or to harden up like Dally or Darry. He wanted him to stay the way he was.
He did not want pony to be a fighter and a rough person. He wanted him to stay the way he was. Gold.
Do you mean Ponyboy from The Outsiders?
I know he's not real but what i mean was what is the pearson who play Ponyboy what is his birthday
"Forsty" is not a word. Do you mean "What were Frosty's last words?" as in Frosty the snowman?
well later on in the book, Ponyboy finds a letter in the book Gone with the Wind and it said that he was gold meaning he wasn't like any other person. he was his own self and he never followed what others did. he looked at the other side of the situation and he wasn't a big juvenile delinquent. basicly, he told him to be himself and show others that its okay, like showing dally the sunset
He want something
He means its not fair
Monty's last words to Andy in the book Tears of a Tiger by Camren Griggs, mean that Monty wants all the best for Andy.
i dont use my head alot
Dally lived on the mean streets of New York City for three years before moving to Oklahoma (Ponyboy's town).