Downhill Dilly May 2026
Linguistically, dilly is a gem. It dates to the 19th century, possibly a shortening of delight or dilworthy (as in “a dilly of a story”). In standard English, a dilly is something excellent: “That’s a dilly of a fish you caught.” But in the downhill version, the excellence is ghostly. The dilly is not what you are now; it’s what you were a dilly at . The downhill modifier turns nostalgia into epitaph.
The phrase is not cruel, exactly. That’s what makes it Appalachian. Cruelty is for outsiders. A downhill dilly is recognized, even loved, but with a tired shake of the head. “That boy was a hell of a quarterback in ’89,” someone might say. “Now? Well. He’s a downhill dilly.” It’s a diagnosis without a doctor. It acknowledges entropy without demanding a solution. downhill dilly
So next time you see a man in bib overalls walking a coonhound down a gravel road, his gait uneven, his cap pulled low—don’t judge. Just say, quietly, to yourself: There goes a downhill dilly. And mean it as a kind of love. Linguistically, dilly is a gem
Recent Comments