"The Scarlet Ibis," by James Hurst, was first published in the July 1960 issue of the Atlantic Monthly magazine. The story focuses on the troubled relationship between two young boys: the narrator and his mentally and physically disabled brother, Doodle. In the course of the story, Doodle becomes symbolically identified with a rare and beautiful scarlet ibis which, finding itself in a hostile environment, dies.
"The Scarlet Ibis" opens with the narrator, Brother, reminiscing about a remarkable event that took place when he was a young boy at his family home at the end of the summer of 1918. The events of the story take place between 1911-1918 on a cotton farm in North Carolina.
Dix Hill in "had anyone stopped to listen to us, we would have been sent to Dix Hill," is a reference to the famous Dorothea Dix Hospital which was a psychiatric hospital in Raleigh, North Carolina.
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