Bartleby The Scrivener Compare And Contrast Essay

502 Words2 Pages

As in life, Melville clearly recognizes the world is filled with parallels. In his story “Bartleby, the Scrivener” each character has his own defect. Alone they are imperfect but as a set, they compliment and mirror each other. Melville carefully introduces the characters, Turkey, and Nippers, first, in order to foreshadow the dissimilarities and equivalences between the narrator and Bartleby. Turkey and Nippers are two scriveners employed by the narrator. Although they are not considered to be model employees, they compliment each other. Nippers is useless and ill-tempered in the morning, due to his indigestion, and industrious and pleasant in the afternoon. Whereas Turkey is productive and amiable in the morning and hopeless and moody in the afternoon, due to his alcohol consumption with lunch. Nippers is ambitious and wishes to be more than a scrivener, whereas Turkey has resigned to his position and uses his age as an excuse when the narrator is evaluating his productivity. …show more content…

The narrator is a well-established man of age and has no family or significant other, he is alone. Even in his business he chooses to separate himself from his employees by dividing the workspace into two areas. After employing Bartleby, the narrator sets him up on his side of the office but erects a green folding screen in order to, again, divide his work area from Bartleby’s and states, “And thus, in a manner, privacy and society were conjoined.” The narrator does this not only to satisfy his necessity for aloneness but to detach himself from his employees, which he perceives to be lower class. To the narrator’s surprise, Bartleby enjoys his isolation behind the green screen, so much so, that the narrator finds difficulty when calling on Bartleby, “Like a very ghost, agreeably to the laws of magical invocation, at the third summons he appeared at the entrance of his

Open Document