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  • Essay / Dill In To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee - 627

    Charles Baker Harris (Dill) “Next stop Maycomb Junction,” the driver shouted. Everything became calm. Suddenly the whistles started blaring and the train whistled. Eventually, the soft rumble of the pieces was all that could be heard. Harper Lee's novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, is a heartwarming novel about prejudice, family, and a child's innocence. Every summer, a boy from Meridian, Mississippi takes a train to the small town of Maycomb, Alabama. This boy's name is Charles Baker Harris, although most people just call him Dill. Through the pages of the classic novel To Kill a Mockingbird, the character Dill shows himself to be an imaginative, solitary, and innocent character, as demonstrated by many of his actions and ideas during this truly amazing and moral adventure. Throughout the novel, Dill seems to be overflowing with imagination. Dill's role in this novel is to present the reader with a different view of the situation. Dill is an outsider and sees things differently from others; this gives a different perspective and shows the same event, but from a different angle....