Cindy Crain
ENG 102
Laura Cline
24 February 2012
The Many Identities of Bartleby
Bartleby is a double for the narrator in Melville’s
story, showing the dark ineffectiveness of the lawyer’s sense of Christian
charity, and the absurdity of his work.
Bartleby represents the side of the narrator who wants
to continue coasting through life and say that he prefers not to work so hard. Bartleby arrived after the narrator was
awarded the office of Master in Chancery and his work load suddenly increased;
he is the shadow that dogs the narrator, the part of him that wants to reject
this busier lifestyle. The narrator’s
ambitious side desires the perks that accompany the position and resents
Bartleby, as his alter ego, forcing him to slow down. In response he hides Bartleby away in a
corner of his office, “I procured a high green folding screen, which might
entirely isolate Bartleby from my sight, though not remove him from my voice.”
(Melville, loc: 118). In this manner he
is hiding away the part of himself that he dislikes and creating a barrier to
separate the two distinct parts of his personality. Note that the narrator does not say that he
can hear Bartleby, but that Bartleby can hear him.
At first Melville allows the narrator, as the dominant
side, a measure of control over Bartleby, “He ran a day and night line, copying
by sun-light and by candle-light. I
should have been quite delighted with his application, had he been cheerfully
industrious. But he wrote on silently,
palely, mechanically.” (Melville, loc: 120).
As time went on the power began to shift. Often when an authoritarian presses his will
on another, the more passive person acquiesces in some areas yet attempts to
defy the will of their tormenter in other ways, and then may completely break
down. In this case Bartleby will copy as
much work as the narrator will give him, yet refuse to do other work. And while his actions are firm he is unable
to completely verbalize a denial, instead repeating that he prefers not to
undertake other tasks.
Here Melville shifts the power to Bartleby, and when the
narrator continues to press him, Bartleby implies that his eyes will not allow
him to copy and completely quits doing any work. At this point the transition is complete;
Bartleby takes the reins in this protracted struggle and try as he might the
narrator cannot eradicate him. Because
Bartleby has figuratively paralyzed the narrator, in order to preserve his view
of how the world should operate the narrator must kill off this unproductive,
inefficient part of himself. He leaves
Bartleby behind and alone, and then denies him, “I am very sorry, sir…but really,
the man you allude to is nothing to me,” (Melville, loc: 454).
The text illustrates the ineffectiveness of Christian
charity as well as the insincerity that often goes hand in hand with the false
benevolence. On multiple occasions the
narrator attempts to give money to Bartleby instead of working on finding a
solution, even after he finds Bartleby’s savings in his desk drawer and it is
apparent that money is not the issue, he attempts five times in three separate
instances to give him funds. The
narrator does the same thing with Turkey when giving him a coat instead of
addressing his alcoholism. Too many
times throwing money at a problem appeases our consciences when all would be
better served by spending time collectively creating real solutions; this is
the main distinction between Christian charity and those who head into the
trenches to produce positive change in the world. The narrator spends time within his head trying
to figure out what is wrong with Bartleby and comes up with several ideas but
doesn’t appear to notice how supercilious this is. Instead of taking time to sit with Bartleby
within his comfort zone (which at that time was his office) and work through
solutions, the narrator leaves daily and tries to figure them out by himself. This is another example of the
unproductiveness of Christian charity.
Melville sheds light on the hypocrisy and insincerity more
clearly than ever when – because the narrator is unable to get Bartleby to
leave – he decides it is divine providence, and then when his friends and
colleagues begin to make snide comments he reverses this decision and moves his
office, threatening Bartleby not to follow.
Finally he has tried every means known to him except for calling the
police, which he tells himself he can’t dishonor himself by doing, so his
decision to let Bartleby remain serves his interest at the time, “At last I see
it, I feel it; I penetrate to the predestinated purpose of my life. I am content.
Others may have loftier parts to enact; but my mission in this world,
Bartleby, if to furnish you with office-room for such period as you may see fit
to remain.”(Melville, loc: 407). So due
to the narrator’s inability to convince Bartleby to leave, and his
unwillingness to tarnish his name by either physically forcing Bartleby to or having
the police remove him, Melville has the narrator jump on this idea that God –
though he doesn’t say God, he says Providence – has put him on the earth in order
to give Bartleby an office to make his home.
![]() |
| http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incubus |
Then the whispers begin.
His colleagues quickly begin to comment on the strangeness of the
situation, both in the narrator’s presence and behind his back. Melville shows us that the facade of being a
charitable Christian is more important to the narrator than actually being
charitable, which reflects back to Bartleby being the shadow side as well, as
many will not only deny others but also will deny their true character in order
to keep up appearances. In order to be
able to retract the original statement that Providence led him to take care of
Bartleby, the narrator must show that Providence is now leading him away from
this divine duty in order to fit with his identity as a charitable
Christian. In order to achieve this,
Melville chooses descriptions that are inflammatory or derogatory within the church,
having the narrator refer to Bartleby as, “the apparition in my room,” (loc:
427) and further said, “I resolved to gather all my faculties together , and for
ever rid me of this this intolerable incubus.” (loc: 428). An apparition is a spirit or supernatural
appearance, which can either be positive or negative, but the connotation in the
story leads towards negative. Incubus is
most definitely a negative, inflammatory term, and is technically a male demon
who sexually assaults women in their sleep.
Although the narrator is not using the term in that way, it’s specifically
chosen by Melville to show how the narrator needs to use this to justify his
retreat from his divine duty. The narrator
can then tell himself that Providence led him, but Bartleby is evil and has
been deceiving both the narrator and
God, so he has no choice but to remove Bartleby from his life. In this part of the story Melville shines the
harshest light on Christian charity.
A scrivener is the prelude to the copy machine in human
form. When law documents needed to be
sent to more than one recipient the scrivener would copy the document by hand
multiple times and then review the copies with another scrivener for
correctness. This is a job that even the
narrator referred to as a “dry, husky sort of business,” (Melville, loc: 100) and
the comparison between the work and Bartleby as a dry, boring personality type
is obvious. Melville creates the
characters of Turkey and Nippers as obvious contrasts of both the job and Bartleby,
and through this dissimilarity Turkey and Nippers are utilized as vivid
illustrations of the absurdity of the job.
Works Cited
Melville,
Herman. Bartleby, the Scrivener A Story of Wall Street. Public Domain
Books, 1853. Digital.

Hi Cindy, I feel you did a good job backing up your thesis statement. Your writing flowed well and kept my interest. I would like to add that I agree with your take on the story. As far as formatting, that is an area that I struggle with, but noticed that the second line of your reference should be intended.Good post.
ReplyDeleteDean
Excellent work Cindy! This is a well written paper with good thought. I like how you comment on how the narrator trys thowing money at the problems in his life without actually finding a solution to the real issues. I am impressed by how you were able to read so much into this story. I have had to go back and read it again to try to understand what the author is trying to say.
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