Herman Melville's Bartlevy, the Scrivener

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“Bartleby, the Scrivener”, is both intriguing and complex. This short story written in the first person sense by Herman Melville, introduces the character of a no-name lawyer who serves as the narrator of the story. This lawyer is perplexed by an employed scrivener working in his office named, Bartleby. It is interesting to look at the relationship that the lawyer has to Bartleby both psychologically and emotionally. While the narrator seems unsuccessful in understanding the importance of the different aspects of his other employees lives, he appears to connect to Bartleby on some levels and succeeds in accurately conveying the environment, emotions and actions throughout his story. This in time leads to several notable similarities between the lawyer and the scrivener, Bartleby. On the surface one may not realize the similarities of the characters in this story, but it is those similarities that the main characters have to one another that make the story interesting. Furthermore one can speculate that the lawyer that Melville has as the narrator for the story, is in character with Melville himself. The characters of Nippers and Turkey were similar in that they worked in the same office and had similar traits that the narrator did not admire. Comparisons of Nippers and Turkey can be seen in that their productivity basically is a mirror image of each other, with Turkey being productive in the morning and Nippers being useless. In the afternoon it is said that while Nippers is productive, Turkey is drunk. The narrator thought them to be lazy and unmotivated. However, it is the relationship of the new employee Bartleby, to his lawyer employer that we will compare. Upon his first coming to work for the lawyer, Bartleby ... ... middle of paper ... ...tinging melancholy seized me” (Mellville 2662). Here the reader begins to see the changes the lawyer is going through, having feelings of sadness that he had never admitted to himself before. The lawyer avoided the confrontation and arguments that are often associated with lawyers, just as Bartleby avoided any confrontation with his co-workers. They would make dis-respectful comments and he would simply respond by saying nothing revealing his passive nature. At the end of the story it is apparent that Bartleby serves not only as a double for the narrator but for humanity as well. Works Cited n.d. Bovatasan, C. "Literary Devices." n.d. . http://literarydevices.net/doppelganger/. web. 11 April 2014. Mellville, Herman. "Bartleby, the Scrivener." Lauter, Paul. The Heath Anthology of American Literature, volume B. California: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2009. 2651.

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