Miss Brill In Katherine Mansfield story, "Miss Brill," the title character is described as a desolate and receptive elderly women who finds Sundays very enjoyable and consoling. This is the reason she observes people in the park who are being lighthearted and satisfied by her own life. She has been going to the park every day and observing people. This activity thrills her and reduces her boredom by feeling herself as part of their lives. In a slapdash, she may escape her own real world by drifting off and joining realism of others. By eavesdropping to other conversations, she feels very satisfied. It made her believe she had a wonderful life. This is because; she has been taking unpleasant insults from strangers and has completely transformed her. She, in fact, has come out of the day dreaming and faced reality after bearing insults from the others and being very lonely. It makes Miss Brill realize that she is part of nothing when she sits on a lonely bench with a ratty old fur and watches the world passing by. She observes other people sitting on benches nearby as comic, silent, “all oldas though, they just come out from little rooms.” Comparatively ignoring her look-a-like and establishing a make-believe world for her to escape. In analyzing the story, the title is providing an example of the author’s ingenuity and attention in detail. Instantaneously, an observer appreciates the character as an isolated spinster probably and aging Englishwoman who is living in a resort in France nearby the seashore. She is the one who gains sufficient support by teaching English to the children, and reading of newspapers to an aging invalid whose ability to hear and comprehend are questionable. Miss Brill apparently also showed various evil tendencies. She memorizes these nasty realities of youthful couples being sarcastic and mocking her “the stupid aged isolated women.” No one gets associated with her, and instantaneously ruins her day-dreaming. This way, her little world