Bartleby, the
scrivener
In
Bartleby, the narrator illustrates a busy law firm office with few other staff,
and Bartleby. Turkey, Nipper and Ginger nut were few other staff members who
were working in the law office, helping the narrator in preparing copies,
typing letter and other documents. Turkey was short, old and efficient in the
morning. Turkey was weird, reckless and had unusual actives going around in the
office, for example would lean over chair for no reason and start boxing with
papers in an indecorous manner (6). Nipper the second scrivener was young, whiskered
and sallow. Productive in afternoon but impatient and irritable in the morning.
Thus, the narrator hired Bartleby for producing better work in efficient
manner. At First Bartleby performed well, typed the letters and documents in
high-quality work, but as time passed by the degraded his quality of work and performance
went down. The narrator was surprised and wanted to help him improve and get his office work done
efficiently.
Narrator
wants to guide and help Bartleby but is unaware of his past and background .
There is no background information about his religion, family or friend which
can create any good or creative thought towards Bartleby. The narrator makes
several attempts to understand him and learn something, but Bartleby replies “I
would prefer not to” was the standard response. Narrator is a professional and
understand how the world is concised with different kind of people. He makes efforts
to understand Bartleby’s strange behavior at workplace. Due to limited access
to his past and personality the author
is helpless in understanding his character completely. “ If we are to understand
Bartleby or Nipper or Turkey or Ginger nut or even lawyer himself, we may so
only though the words of the lawyer. All actions, all dialogue, all statements,
all interpretations come to the reader through the report of the lawyer.
Therefore, if we contend we know anything of Bartleby, it is only what the
narrator knows of Bartleby, and if we are to have any insight into the
narrator, it must be through the
examination of his own words” noted by Todd Davis. Thus, the narrator illustrates
daily office incidents in which Bartleby shows absence of mind, dull and differed
reactions on questions with similar response “ I would prefer not to”
Bartleby
can be in clerical depression facing the chronic tension of the Wall Street in
New York. Narrator describes how Bartleby shows symptoms of depression as how
he lacks motivation in life. The narrator studies how his work performance is altered
due to the hectic paper work in the office. Bartleby was exposed to new modern
office work which would have curtail characteristics of which he was not aware
of. Having refused to make copies and type documents suggests that he was bored
of doing similar work and wanted to achieve something different in life. The
Wall Street impression of power, control, money and greed for growing more are
some threats he faced. Bartleby was not willing to accept that society and
wanted to live in his dark work with limited opportunism and be satisfied with
his life. Moreover according to J. Bottom’s “A close reading of “Bartleby, the
Scrivener,” his most sustained study of New York, reveals in fact that Melville
had profoundly theological understandings of the nineteenth-century city. It is
true that he never possessed much notion of effective social reform; in
“Bartleby” the urban social order is as fixed and determined as the order of
Nature. Packing hordes together in its poverty-stricken tenements and slums, the
city breeds endless crime, filth and disease.” This shows how low motivation,
workload and corporate office work created a negative effect on Bartleby as a
work environment as the law felt like unconstitutional.
Thus,
narrator keeps Bartleby at work with a hope to improve his mental stress and
improve his life. But narrator later looses hope due to Bartleby’s lack of
understanding the effort and give up on him. After several efforts he had one
response to all the “I would prefer not to,” which shows how Bartleby was
constrained to his own world with limited access, opportunities, hope which are
good but took his life due to starvation. He had to pay for following his path
of life, which led him to death .