Pony Boy In The Outsiders

587 Words2 Pages

.E. Hinton’s novel, “The Outsiders,” takes place around the 1960’s in a small town. Pony boy is known as a Greaser, with his greasy hair, bad boy clothing, and him and his other Greaser friends living on the poor side of town. One lesson the story suggests is that even though things get rough, they are always there for each other.Pony boy, a fellow Greaser, is different from his peers. He is quite intelligent in school, but a little unsure with his common sense. All of his peers have sharp thinking when it comes down to rumbling with the Socs and Pony boy is not really the violent type. Even though Pony boy is seen as a wimp like young man, his buddies still take up for him no matter what. “You take up for your buddies, no matter what they do...If you don’t stick up for …show more content…

Johny and Pony boy have to flee and Dally (a member from their gang) helps them. He covers for them, helps them with cash and supplies, gives them the perfect hideout, and last of all he keeps it a secret from everyone else. Dally doesn’t tell the cops, the family members or the gang members, and he looks out for his young peers through it all and he doesn’t care if he goes down. “Get that sweat shirt off...Dry off and wait here...Take care kid.” (Hinton 60)All the way to the end of the story, the events that happen show how there’s an ongoing love and dependence between all the Greasers in the gang. The Socs act the way they act towards the Greasers because they view them as disgusting low-life civilians. Though through it all the gang was there for each other and that is sign of brotherly love. “Don’t you know a rumble

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