Monday, October 21, 2019

Free Essays on Bartleby

â€Å"Bartleby the Scrivener† In â€Å"Bartleby the Scrivener†, the narrator is driven to the brink of insanity by Bartleby, and is baffled even by the end of the story. When Bartleby is first introduced, the narrator feels that he is an honest, hardworking man who keeps to himself. Then, after the first time Bartleby â€Å"prefers not to† do something, the narrator begins getting confused, and even submits to Bartleby’s mild requests. By the time the narrator goes so mad that he vacates his building to get away from Bartleby, all he wants to do is go on living and forget about the strange Scrivener. He is soon hounded by a lawyer, and it appears no one can get Bartleby to leave the building. At this point, the narrator is a little more sympathetic with Bartleby, because he has realizes that he is the only one who knows who Bartleby is. When Bartleby is finally escorted to the â€Å"Tombs† by the police, the narrator finally accepts Bartleby’s strange disposition, and he pays the â€Å"Grub-Man† to be polite to and feed Bartleby. He has accepted Bartleby as a liability, and somehow feels responsible for him. The fact that Bartleby used to work in the dead letter department of the postal services explains his character well. Bartleby’s entire life consisted of burning completely useless letters that were meant for people long dead. This must have effected him in some way to become the dull, pale, and grim person he is.... Free Essays on Bartleby Free Essays on Bartleby Theme Analysis Could the world in 1984 ever really exist? This question haunts readers from the first to the last pages of Orwell’s novel. Sadly, the answer is ‘yes’; or at least Orwell hopes that readers will leave 1984 accepting the possibility enough to question government and tread cautiously into the future. Orwell intends to portray Oceania just realistically enough to convince contemporary readers that such a society has, in fact, existed and could exist again if people forget the lessons taught by history, or fail to guard against tyrannical, totalitarian governments. These two themes- totalitarianism and history- tie together the plot and messages in 1984. Orwell sets his story in war-torn London. Thirty to forty bombs rain down on the city per week and everywhere Winston turns reminders of the war, such as the Two Minutes Hate and billboards plastered with Party slogans, color his existence. Deprivation, another bi-product of war, hangs in the air as heavily as the horrible grime and stench created by the city’s overcrowded tenements. Upon opening 1984, Orwell’s first readers, English people during the late 1940s, would have immediately recognized themselves. Having just emerged from WWII, Londoners would have intimately related to the deprivation and destruction portrayed in 1984. However, while Winston placed full blame for his situation on the shoulders of Big Brother, Londoners would not have identified the cause of their misery as the British government. More likely, the British would have blamed Nazi Germany for starting the war and causing such chaos and devastation. Winston’s rebellion against Big Brother would have resonated with contemporary audiences because they too had recently struggled to defeat the totalitarian regimes of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy. While it is difficult to pinpoint the specific sparks that set off WWII, the people fighting in the Allied armies must clear... Free Essays on Bartleby â€Å"Bartleby the Scrivener† In â€Å"Bartleby the Scrivener†, the narrator is driven to the brink of insanity by Bartleby, and is baffled even by the end of the story. When Bartleby is first introduced, the narrator feels that he is an honest, hardworking man who keeps to himself. Then, after the first time Bartleby â€Å"prefers not to† do something, the narrator begins getting confused, and even submits to Bartleby’s mild requests. By the time the narrator goes so mad that he vacates his building to get away from Bartleby, all he wants to do is go on living and forget about the strange Scrivener. He is soon hounded by a lawyer, and it appears no one can get Bartleby to leave the building. At this point, the narrator is a little more sympathetic with Bartleby, because he has realizes that he is the only one who knows who Bartleby is. When Bartleby is finally escorted to the â€Å"Tombs† by the police, the narrator finally accepts Bartleby’s strange disposition, and he pays the â€Å"Grub-Man† to be polite to and feed Bartleby. He has accepted Bartleby as a liability, and somehow feels responsible for him. The fact that Bartleby used to work in the dead letter department of the postal services explains his character well. Bartleby’s entire life consisted of burning completely useless letters that were meant for people long dead. This must have effected him in some way to become the dull, pale, and grim person he is....

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