Outsiders Formal Writing Essay
Death is a very common thing in everyday life. In “The Outsiders”, the gang deals
with the losses of their two good friends, Johnny and Dally. Some are depressed, some
are accepting, others bargain the save the reputation of their friend. Much like in real
life, the characters in the book “The Outsiders” deal with death and grieving in their own
separate ways after the death of their friends and loss.
The first given incident of loss was the death of Johnny in chapter 9. Dally
instantly reacts in anger, hitting a wall and running out of the hospital room.
“Damnit, Johnny…” He begged, slammin his fist into the wall, hammering it to make it
obey his will. “Oh, damnit, Johnny, don’t die, please don’t die…” He suddenly bolted
through the door and down the hall. (126) While Daly’s reaction is concealed in anger,
Ponyboy claims that Johnny’s still alive, that he isn’t dead, it starts to sound like his
sanity is dwindling. “Johnny’s dead, but he wasn’t. The body back at the hospital wasn’t
Johnny. Johnny was somewhere else maybe asleep in the lot, of at the bowling alley
playing the pinball machine. Or sitting on the back step of the church in Windrixville. I’d
go home and walk by the lot and see Johnny, sitting there smoking a cigarette, and
maybe we’d lie on our backs and watch the stars. Johnny isn’t dead” I told myself… “
He isn’t dead..” (127)
Another prime example is after the death of Johnny, Soda accepts that he’s
dead, that “death” is what he wanted because the only thing he cared about in life was
Johnny, and now he was dead. Steve stumbled forward with a sob, but Soda caught
him by the shoulders. "Easy, buddy, easy," I heard him say softly, "there's nothing we
can do now." (131)
This also shows how Steve reacted to the death of Dally. He was saddened,
disheartened, depressed, all of those emotions are portrayed in this small line of text.
Lastly, during the trial over the gang, and the decision if Darry, Soda, and
Ponyboy get to stay together as a family, Ponyboy considered blaming himself for the
death of Bob. To save the reputation of the “charging into a burning church to save
small children” Johnny.
“All of the Socs mostly stuck to the truth, except they said Johnny killed Bob. I figured I
could straighten that out when it was my turn to talk.” (143) Ponyboy was going to risk
his own reputation for Johnny’s, so that he died a hero and not a murderer.
Concluding, the book “The Outsiders” is an accurate representation of the feeling
people go through when experiencing loss or grief. Both Johnny’s and Dally’s death
triggered different and strong emotions on every member of the gang.