Table of Contents
- 1 What message did Johnny and Ponyboy in the book?
- 2 What is Johnny’s last message to Ponyboy?
- 3 What comment did Johnny make while Ponyboy was reading Gone with the Wind?
- 4 How does this poem reflect explain symbolize Johnny’s short life?
- 5 What did Ponyboy ask the nurse to give him?
- 6 What did Johnny say to Ponyboy in Gone with the Wind?
What message did Johnny and Ponyboy in the book?
Johnny tells Ponyboy to keep this quality of innocence, and tells him to help Darry appreciate these forms of innocence as well. He also tells Ponyboy to help Darry see the good in the world (as Darry doesn’t), and he tells Ponyboy that he doesn’t have to be a greaser his whole life but can be anyone he wants to be.
What is Johnny’s last message to Ponyboy?
What do Johnny’s last words mean? Right before he dies in the hospital, Johnny says “Stay gold, Ponyboy.” Ponyboy cannot figure out what Johnny means until he reads the note Johnny left. Johnny writes that “stay gold” is a reference to the Robert Frost poem Ponyboy shared when they were hiding at the church.
How did Johnny’s message affect Ponyboy in The Outsiders?
Johnny’s message affects Ponyboy by inspiring him to write The Outsiders. The message explains Robert Frost’s poem regarding the transitory nature of life and fragility of innocence and encourages Pony to metaphorically stay gold.
What is Johnny’s advice to Ponyboy?
Johnny tells Ponyboy to “stay gold” when he dies, which is a result of the poem they read in Chapter 5. When Johnny dies, he tells Ponyboy to “stay gold.” What he means is that he wants him to stay good-hearted.
What comment did Johnny make while Ponyboy was reading Gone with the Wind?
What comment did Johnny make while Ponyboy read from Gone With the Wind? The Southern gentlemen reminded him of Dally. Ponyboy would probably ride into sure death to be gallant. The Confederate and Union armies were just like greasers and Socs.
How does this poem reflect explain symbolize Johnny’s short life?
How does this poem reflect/explain/symbolize Johnny’s short life? The poem symbolizes Johnny’s short life because he was gold. In the poem it says “nothing gold can stay.” This represents Johnny because he was too pure for the world he lived in; thus, he was taken from it.
What comment did Johnny make about Gone with the Wind?
Johnny’s favorite aspect of Gone with the Wind was the gallant southern gentlemen “with their manners and charm,” who reminded him of Dallas Winston (76). Johnny admired their bravery and resolve, and even explained to Ponyboy about how one night Dally got picked up by the police for vandalism that Two-Bit committed.
What was the text of Johnny’s letter to Ponyboy?
Johnny’s Letter. Johnny’s Letter is a letter that Johnny asked the nurse in the hospital to give to Ponyboy. Text in the book. “Ponyboy, I asked the nurse to give you this book so you could finish it. The doctor came in a while ago but I knew anyway.
What did Ponyboy ask the nurse to give him?
Ponyboy, I asked the nurse to give you this book so you could finish it. The doctor came in a while ago but I knew anyway. I keep getting tireder and tireder. Listen, I don’t mind dying now. It was worth it. It’s worth saving those kids. Their lives are woth more than mine, they have more to live for.
What did Johnny say to Ponyboy in Gone with the Wind?
After Johnny ‘s death, Ponyboy discovers a letter from Johnny inside his copy of Gone With the Wind. Johnny’s main message to Ponyboy is one of hope. He reminds Ponyboy of a Robert Frost poem in which the author says, “Nature’s first green is gold.”
How did Johnny tell Ponyboy to be a greaser?
Johnny tells Ponyboy to keep this quality of innocence, and tells him to help Darry appreciate these forms of innocence as well. He also tells Ponyboy to help Darry see the good in the world (as Darry doesn’t), and he tells Ponyboy that he doesn’t have to be a greaser his whole life but can be anyone he wants to be.