Dill was staying with his aunt, Miss Rachel Haverford, for the summer in the book "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee.
Dill's letter informs Scout that he will not be able to come back to Maycomb that summer as planned, but instead will be staying with his new father in another town.
Dill does not visit that summer because he is living with his mother during that time. He only visits Maycomb during the school breaks when he stays with his aunt, Miss Rachel Haverford.
Dill is not coming to Maycomb this summer because his mother has remarried and they are staying with his new family. Scout feels sad and lonely without Dill's presence, as he is one of her closest friends and they share many adventures together. She misses his imaginative spirit and companionship.
The letter says that Dill has a new father and that he will be staying in Meridian with his family.
Dill Harris was the friend who only visited Maycomb during the summer in the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee.
Dill arrives in the summer.
Scout won't be able to see Dill this summer because he is spending it with his family in Meridian.
At the beginning of summer, Dill asked Scout to marry him because he wanted to make her his wife. This proposal was more innocent and playful, as Dill was a child and did not fully understand the concept of marriage.
Dill lives with his Aunt Rachel in Maycomb while he is visiting for the summer.
Dill cannot come visit them because his mother has taken a job working for the Democrats in Washington D.C., and he will be spending the summer there.
Jem goes to the Radley's house and slaps the side of it because Dill dared him to.
Both Dill and Scout do have an attraction for one another. Scout always looks forward in seeing Dill each summer, and Dill looks forward in "marrying" Scout in the future........