To Kill a Mockingbird
What is Dill's opinion of the trial at the end of Chapter 19? Support your answer with a quote.
What is Dill's opinion of the trial at the end of Chapter 19? Support your answer with a quote.
What is Dill's opinion of the trial at the end of Chapter 19? Support your answer with a quote.
Dill is crushed by the verdict. Dill cries at the trial because he has no other coping mechanism with which to react to the unjust way he feels Tom Robinson is being treated. Dill is just a little boy, and he knows of no other way to deal with this kind of injustice. I believe that Scout and Jem react differently (Scout actually takes Dill out of the courtroom) because of the way their father has raised them. Atticus hasn't sugarcoated the proceedings for his children.
What about the quote to support your answer?
You can find one if you look at chapter 19.
alrighty, thx btw...