Skip to main content

What is the meaning of the poem "Nothing Gold Can Stay" from chapter 5 in The Outsiders?

The poem’s meaning in the story refers to the fact that no one can stay young and innocent for long. 


When Johnny and Pony are on the run, hanging out, Johnny comments about the beauty of the sunrise.  This reminds Pony of a Robert Frost poem.  He connects the poem to the moment because the poem is about how nothing stays young. 



"The mist was what was pretty," Johnny said. "All gold and silver."


...


The poem’s meaning in the story refers to the fact that no one can stay young and innocent for long. 


When Johnny and Pony are on the run, hanging out, Johnny comments about the beauty of the sunrise.  This reminds Pony of a Robert Frost poem.  He connects the poem to the moment because the poem is about how nothing stays young. 



"The mist was what was pretty," Johnny said. "All gold and silver."


"Uhmmmm," I said, trying to blow a smoke ring.


"Too bad it couldn't stay like that all the time."


"Nothing gold can stay." I was remembering a poem I'd read once. (Ch. 5) 



This poem becomes very significant to Johnny.  When he is dying, he asks to speak to Pony.  He quotes the poem to him, which demonstrates how affected he was by it.  To Johnny, the poem has come to symbolize the innocence of youth. 



I barely heard him. I came closer and leaned over to hear what he was going to "Stay gold, Ponyboy. Stay gold..." The pillow seemed to sink a little, and Johnny died. (Ch. 9) 



Pony is deeply affected by Johnny’s death, of course. He understands what Johnny is telling him.  Even though he is a greaser, and all of his brothers are greasers, this does not mean that he has to follow this lifestyle.  He has a chance to be something else. 


Pony has always been the deep one.  He is good at school and likes to watch movies.  Yet, through spending time with Johnny, Pony learns that his friend has depths he hadn’t realized.  Johnny may not be good at school, but he does care and he is a good thinker.  Johnny was very taken by Gone with the Wind, for example.  Pony has a chance to "stay gold," meaning that he can rely on his education and his intelligence to make something of himself in the world.  

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What is the meaning of "juggling fiends" in Macbeth?

Macbeth is beginning to realize that the three witches have been deceiving him since he first encountered them. Like jugglers, they have kept changing their forecasts in order create confusion. This is particularly apparent when the Second Apparition they raise in Act IV,   Scene 1 tells him that no man of woman born can overcome him in hand-to-hand battle--and then Macbeth finds himself confronted by the one man he has been avoiding out of a... Macbeth is beginning to realize that the three witches have been deceiving him since he first encountered them. Like jugglers, they have kept changing their forecasts in order create confusion. This is particularly apparent when the Second Apparition they raise in Act IV,   Scene 1 tells him that no man of woman born can overcome him in hand-to-hand battle--and then Macbeth finds himself confronted by the one man he has been avoiding out of a sense of guilt, and that man tells him: Despair thy charm. And let the angel whom thou still hast serve...

What are some external and internal conflicts that Montag has in Fahrenheit 451?

 Montag, the protagonist of Fahrenheit 451, faces both external and internal conflicts throughout the novel. Some examples of these conflicts are: External Conflicts: Conflict with the society: Montag lives in a society that prohibits books and critical thinking. He faces opposition from the government and the people who enforce this law. Montag struggles to come to terms with the fact that his society is based on censorship and control. Conflict with his wife: Montag's wife, Mildred, is completely absorbed in the shallow and meaningless entertainment provided by the government. Montag's growing dissatisfaction with his marriage adds to his external conflict. Conflict with the fire captain: Montag's superior, Captain Beatty, is the personification of the oppressive regime that Montag is fighting against. Montag's struggle against Beatty represents his external conflict with the government. Internal Conflicts: Conflict with his own beliefs: Montag, at the beginning of th...

In A People's History of the United States, why does Howard Zinn feel that Wilson made a flimsy argument for entering World War I?

"War is the health of the state," the radical writer Randolph Bourne said, in the midst of the First World War. Indeed, as the nations of Europe went to war in 1914, the governments flourished, patriotism bloomed, class struggle was stilled, and young men died in frightful numbers on the battlefields-often for a hundred yards of land, a line of trenches. -- Chapter 14, Page 350, A People's History of the United States Howard Zinn outlines his arguments for why World War I was fought in the opening paragraph of Chapter 14 (referenced above). The nationalism that was created by the Great War benefited the elite political and financial leadership of the various countries involved. Socialism, which was gaining momentum in Europe, as was class struggle, took a backseat to mobilizing for war. Zinn believes that World War I was fought for the gain of the industrial capitalists of Europe in a competition for capital and resources. He states that humanity itself was punished by t...