Tuesday, August 25, 2009
VOCABULARY
HEREOS
Nothing Gold can stay
This poem is in The Outsiders, Johnny reads it at the church. You need to comment on this poem, discuss the content, poetic techniques; such as rhyme,alliteration, personal narrative and metaphors and discuss why the poem is so important to Johnny and then Ponyboy.
Nature's first green is gold
Her hardest hue to hold
Her early leaf's a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
by Robert Frost
Monday, August 24, 2009
Quiz!
Answer these m/c questions in your books!
1. Who is the second-youngest member of the greasers?
2. In which town is the abandoned church where Ponyboy and Johnny hide out located?
3. In which sport does Ponyboy participate?
4. What is the name of Sodapop’s horse?
5. What does Ponyboy say is visible on both the East Side and the West Side?
6. What book do Johnny and Ponyboy read in the church?
7. Who kills Dally?
8. How does Darry know Paul Holden, his first opponent at the rumble?
9. Who is Randy?
10. Why does Sodapop’s girlfriend Sandy move to Florida?
11. Who is the father of Sandy’s baby?
12. With what does Ponyboy threaten the Socs who approach him outside of the convenience store?
13. How does Ponyboy get a concussion?
14. Which character dies first?
15. Who is Randy’s girlfriend?
16. Which character has movie-star good looks?
17. What is Two-Bit’s most prized possession?
18. How old is Darry?
19. Why are Cherry and Marcia alone at the drive-in?
20. When did Ponyboy’s recurring nightmares begin?
21. What kind of car does Cherry drive?
22. Who bleaches Ponyboy’s hair?
23. How did the Curtis brothers’ parents die?
24. What is Ponyboy’s real name?
25. Where did Dally live right before moving to Ponyboy’s town?
What you should know!
full title · The Outsiders
author · S. E Hinton
time and place written · 1960s, Tulsa, Oklahoma
narrator · Ponyboy Curtis
point of view · Ponyboy gives a first-person, subjective account of events, explaining how we should interpret events and people in the story.
tone · Youthful; melodramatic; slangy; simplistic
tense · Past
setting (time) · Mid-1960s
setting (place) · Tulsa, Oklahoma
protagonist · Ponyboy
major conflict · Against the background of the clash between the poor greasers and the rich Socs, the greaser Ponyboy struggles to mature.
rising action · Johnny kills a Soc; Johnny and Ponyboy flee; tension mounts between the greasers and Socs.
climax · Johnny’s death, in Chapter 9.
falling action · The greasers win the rumble; Dally dies; Ponyboy recovers from his emotional and physical trauma.
themes · Bridging the gap between rich and poor; honor among the lawless; the treacherousness of male-female interactions
symbols · Two-Bit’s switchblade; cars; Bob’s rings; greaser hair
foreshadowing · The Socs jump Ponyboy while he walks home alone, previewing their later attack on him and Johnny; Johnny threatens to kill anybody who jumps him again, foreshadowing his murder of Bob.