Dill Character Analysis Essay

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“Folks call me Dill” (8). Thus did Dill Harris, a young boy in Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird, enter the town of Maycomb. Dill plays an important role in To Kill A Mockingbird, a rather dark and dreary tale of racism and corrupt justice. If the story went on in a monotonous tone of dread for its entire length, it would not have been met with the acclaim that it was. But Dill solved this problem as the comic relief at times when the reader thought nothing could relieve the situation’s solemnity. The appearances that Dill makes at these moments are anything but boring, and his stellar abilities of fabrication add even more hilarity to the character. However, Dill’s personality does not include nothing but jokes and games. He also possesses a sympathy to Scout, not only in his rather premature marriage proposal, but also in the way he gives her his time when Jem grows out of their ways and is not available for play. Dill’s storytelling abilities, his love for simple fun, and his sympathy all blend to …show more content…

Dill can produce a wild narrative from virtually any conversation topic. For example, one of Dill’s life stories includes seeing to twins stuck together on the train that Dill rode by himself. The truth is up to the reader to decide, for Dill always sticks to his original story. The size of Dill’s story portfolio is described in more detail by Scout on page 63: “Dill could tell the biggest ones I ever heard. Among other things, he had been up in a mail plane seventeen times, he had been to Nova Scotia, he had seen an elephant, and his granddaddy was Brigadier General Joe Wheeler and left him his sword.” While Dill tells these stories with the utmost sincerity, it remains fairly obvious that none of them ever happened. Dill’s fabrication abilities add greatly to the interest and hilarity of Dill’s

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