Ponyboy is better off with Darry because kids are better off with family. on pg 166 say Ponyboy Curtis
Ponyboy is better off with Darry because kids are better off with family. on pg 166 say Ponyboy Curtis
“Maybe the two different worlds we live in aren’t so different. We saw the same sunset.” (Hinton 41) In The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, Ponyboy is the main character. Even though Ponyboy shows many signs of a possibility of being a Soc, he is apart of the poorer class, the greasers.…
Why Should Ponyboy go into the system? Ponyboy should go to the system because he gets physically abused and he could get neglected, Emotionally abused,or even Medical neglected. Ponyboy should go to the system because he gets beat up by the socs. He got kicked in the head and got a concussion because of darry. He is less likely to go to jail if he was in the system because he could run away again or even worse and Darry could get mad get mad and hit Ponyboy again.…
These are some reasons why Pony-Boy should go to foster care. The first thing is that Pony-Boy would not be allowed to smoke anymore. He has been allowed to smoke by his brothers Darry and Soda-Pop for a long time, and this is very bad for him. This could cause lung cancer for him, which could kill him in the long run. By being put into foster care, he will not be allowed to smoke, so he will healthier.…
Conclusion Clearly, Ponyboy confronts many conflicts in the story The Outsiders. These conflicts are being involved with a murder, saving the kids, and being taken away from Darry. They may have been hard to face for Ponyboy, but he pulled through in the end and became a great person.…
Ponyboy is at the risk of getting killed, arrested, and hurt while he is with Darry. Ponyboy should be put in the system because there he would have a less risk of getting jailed, lung cancer, fighting, and so much more. With Ponyboy going to the system he will have better health and he will have a lower chance of getting lung cancer. People would stay with Darry but that is not such a great idea. If he stays with him Ponyboy will be at bigger risk of getting jailed, getting in fights, and he won’t have as big of a chance of getting brain damage.…
I have read from page 1-66 of “The Secret Life of Bees” by Sue Monk Kidd. As I was reading, I was stunned about the similarity I found connecting this novel to “The Outsiders” by S.E Hinton. In “The Outsiders”, Ponyboy was having trouble at home with his older brother (who is basically his father since both of his parents died) Darry. After Darry slapped Ponyboy, Ponyboy had enough of the fighting between the two of them, so he decided to run away. He decided to take Johnny with him.…
Outsiders that Became Heros Have you ever felt like hero or wanted to be a hero. Heroes are people that risk their lives or put themselves in danger to save others. In The Outsiders Ponyboy, Johnny and dally are heros to their friends and others.…
Even though most will disagree, Ponyboy belongs in a foster home. If he were to go to his previous home, he would return to being in a gang, smoking an unhealthy portion of cigarettes, and he would not have much of a chance at a good life. Living in a foster home would give him a chance to grow, and he can discover new things about himself. He will be in an environment void of most bad influences. Ponyboy belongs somewhere he can be influenced for the better.…
You two can get sent to a boys’ home.” (Darry~ pg 166-167). Darry’s also the primary money earner for the household, and has to sacrifice many of his own hobbies, such as athletics, and the chance for an education, for the boys. “Ponyboy, you don't think enough, 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.”…
In The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton tells the tale of 2 gangs, the stuck-up, rich socs, and the rough, impoverished greasers. Pony thinks that greasers are the only ones that have it hard, and that they’re the only ones with problems. He then talks with his family who agrees, but friends who don’t. He proceeds to go to the movies and meet a girl named Cherry who talks to him about socs lives. Pony then decides to learn more and realizes that even if you’re given whatever you want, that you will still have problems.…
In the novels we have read this year, The Outsiders and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime, both main characters narrate and tell of their experiences and circumstances they have faced. The protagonists from each novel, Ponyboy Curtis and Christopher Boone, share many similarities but also have several differences shown throughout the books. In both novels, the main character was a teenage boy who had to face many obstacles throughout his life. Christopher’s autism is a constant struggle he has to face daily. Ponyboy is judged for the way he appears and the community he lives in.…
He feels that Darry thinks of him as a nuisance. If Sodapop, his other brother, was not around Darry would have him thrown into a boys home. Darry is really strict on Ponyboy but it is just tough love. Darry wants the best for Ponyboy he wants Pony to have a future unlike Sodapop and he had as a kid. For example, Ponyboy says to Johnny, “but he can't stand me.…
Another statement is: has Ponyboy and Johnny always been in a strong relationship? The answer is yes, but the progress of faith in each other from the beginning to the end, was a dramatic change in the level of friendship. The friendship between Pony and Johnny starts with Johnny, Pony, Dally and Two-Bit after the movie theatre. They decide to walk home to waste time but Ponyboy gets home very late. Darry is not happy.…
1. The Greasers: the extended family of the Curtis brothers in The Outsiders. The main characters present in The Outsiders are young men ranging from fourteen year-old to twenty year-old. They are very few adults or female characters in the novel.…
At first Ponyboy thinks the Socs have it made, but by the end of the novel, he too realizes that "things are rough all over". Not only does he find that different people have different problems, but little experiences can be the same for any other, such as the sunset. Once he views Cherri's and Randy's perspective without his own ideals clouding his judgment he is able to understand that the sides make no difference unless they are perceived that way. Ponyboy realizes Darry really did love and care for him and just yelled at him at times and nagged him because he didn't want him to get hurt. His fear of "losing another person he loved" (p.98) is what makes him so protective, and it's not that he has no feelings as Ponyboy originally believes, but too many.…