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Bartleby Final

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Submitted By dillonw22
Words 646
Pages 3
Dillon Willett
Comp II
Ms. Genovise
October 6, 2010

Bartleby, He Is Something More.

Throughout the story, Bartleby, the Scrivener, feelings for Bartleby grow fonder from the speaker’s viewpoint. Bartleby isn’t just a copyist for the New York lawyer; he is the one who ultimately helps the lawyer find himself. Passages in the story show that Bartleby is a savior-like figure, using Christian symbols. From beginning to end, there is a change in outlook on life from the speaker’s perspective, because of his situation with Bartleby. His employee saves him from his busy lifestyle, manifesting his embedded feelings of compassion for the character.
The lawyers business had increased considerably. Instead of pushing his two original copyists Turkey and Nippers he was looking to hire. “Not only must I push the clerks already with me, but I must have additional help” (147). At that point in time, the lawyer didn’t realize that Bartleby would help him so much, but in an odd sort of way. He was not a big help inside the office, he often refused to do his job, but he did show the lawyer a different side of life. He displayed how good it felt to help people, and try to make other people’s lives better.
One Sunday morning the lawyer, Bartleby’s employer finds Bartleby has been residing in the New York office building. When the speaker realizes he is living in the office, he has enough love for the man already to ask Bartleby to come stay with him in his own home. Of course he “ prefers not to.” The lawyer decides to pack up his belongings and move out of the office building and restore his business at a new location leaving Bartleby there alone. When the landlord has Bartleby arrested for not leaving the premises, A stranger informs him he left someone there when the speaker says “..the man you allude is nothing to me”(162) Just as peter denied Christ in chapter 22 of Luke in the Holy Bible. The lawyer denied Bartleby three times in the story because he is scared of what people will think of him letting this crazy copyist run his business life. As Bartleby was put behind bars, the speaker regretted denying him. He went to see him but Bartleby preferred not to talk to him, he had been informed he had not eaten in days. There was a Grub Man, who prepared food for the inmates and the speaker felt such care for Bartleby he paid the man to see he was given a good meal. “Well then, said I, slipping some silver into the Grub Man (as they called him), I want you to give particular attention to my friend there; let him have the best dinner you can get, and you must be as polite to him as possible”(165). The speaker is now referring to Bartleby as his friend and paying off the cook to make his stay as good as it can get. He does this because he feels sorry for him and because Bartleby has helped him find his big heart under the stereotypical lawyer persona. The lawyer wanted to help Bartleby, and he wouldn’t let him. That is what made it so hard on the lawyer. Bartleby’s character showed the lawyer what is important in his life, not just business or copying papers but helping a depressed friend. From the start the speaker never disliked Bartleby, but as the story was told he became more wrapped up in wanting to help him. “Ah, Bartleby, Ah Humanity” (166) was the closing line of the story which proves that Bartleby had embedded some kind of care the speaker had obtained through the story.

Works Cited

1. Melville, Herman. “Bartleby, the Scrivener” The Bedford Introduction to Literature.
Ed. Micheal Meyer. 9Th ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s 2011.
142-166. print

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