Bartleby and Benito Cereno by Herman Melville


Bartleby and Benito Cereno
Title : Bartleby and Benito Cereno
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0486264734
ISBN-10 : 9780486264738
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 104
Publication : Published January 1, 1990

Herman Melville towers among American writers not only for his powerful novels, but also for the stirring novellas and short stories that flowed from his pen. Two of the most admired of these — "Bartleby" and "Benito Cereno" — first appeared as magazine pieces and were then published in 1856 as part of a collection of short stories entitled The Piazza Tales.
"Bartleby" (also known as "Bartleby the Scrivener") is an intriguing moral allegory set in the business world of mid-19th-century New York. A strange, enigmatic man employed as a clerk in a legal office, Bartleby forces his employer to come to grips with the most basic questions of human responsibility, and haunts the latter's conscience, even after Bartleby's dismissal.
"Benito Cereno," considered one of Melville's best short stories, deals with a bloody slave revolt on a Spanish vessel. A splendid parable of man's struggle against the forces of evil, the carefully developed and mysteriously guarded plot builds to a dramatic climax while revealing the horror and depravity of which man is capable.
Reprinted here from standard texts in a finely made, yet inexpensive new edition, these stories offer the general reader and students of Melville and American literature sterling examples of a literary giant at his story-telling best.
--back cover


Bartleby and Benito Cereno Reviews


  • Fátima Linhares

    O que têm em comum Billy Budd, Bartleby e Benito Cereno? São três desgraçados, sendo que o primeiro e o terceiro são marinheiros desgraçados e Bartleby acho que não esteve no mar, ou será que esteve e por isso é que prefere não fazer? Pode ser, já que não conhecemos o seu passado. Seria também marinheiro?

    Melville escreve bem, não há dúvida, mas, em Billy Budd e, principalmente em Benito Cereno é muito maçudo. Neste último senti-me como se estivesse a ler a descrição d'o casarão. Descrevia, descrevia e nunca mais desenvolvia, sendo que é um acontecimento simples para o qual chegavam 50 páginas, se tanto. Aborrecido, e ainda para mais, cheio de termos náuticos. Acho que não gosto de livros com histórias de marinheiros.

    Quanto ao Bartleby, muita gente gosta da história e, de certeza que gostaria de responder ao chefe, "preferia não o fazer", mas isso não o levou muito longe. Não o achei um insolente ou insubordinado, nem sequer arrojado, mas apenas alguém com um trauma qualquer que nunca saberemos qual era. Nesta história é que se devia ter esticado, Sr. Melville.


    Billy Budd - 3*
    Bartleby - 3*
    Benito Cereno - 2*

  • Dolors

    To a sensitive being, pity is not seldom pain. And when at last it is perceived that such pity cannot lead to effectual succor, common sense bids the soul be rid of it. Bartleby, the Scrivener

    Life glues us together in ways we can’t anticipate, obliging us to broaden our individual frames of reference in order to imagine the other, overcoming our self-centered blindness.
    That inevitable interconnectedness is most plausible in Melville’s most enduring and intriguing short novellas Bartleby, the Scrivever and Benito Cereno.

    When a New York lawyer needs to hire another copyist, it is Bartleby who responds to his advertisement, and arrives "pallidly neat, pitiably respectable, incurably forlorn."At first a diligent employee, he soon begins to refuse work, saying only "I would prefer not to.". So begins the story of Bartleby—passive to the point of absurdity yet extremely disturbing—which rapidly turns from farce to inexplicable tragedy.
    The employer being a first person, conscious narrator who uses the piece of literature he composes as a means of contemplating his situation in life. It becomes clear that his use of Christian and classical imagery hints at an understanding of what is right and wrong and some –partial- awareness of his own moral deficiency.
    I have to admit I was more than puzzled by this eccentric clerk, I couldn’t understand his passive refusal to work and I changed my view upon him several times along with the biased narrator, sometimes seeing him as a sort of Christ-figure or an exploited worker, others as a Thoreau-like practitioner of passive resistance.
    It wasn’t until I read the last lines of the tale that the setting of the story, this business world symbolized by omnipresent Wall Street buildings surrounding the office, pinpointing the growing division between employer and employee and between the capitalist and working classes, took full force, making me ponder how the choice of one particular perspective determine the responsibility of our actions. In short, who is to blame?

    In Benito Cereno we come across a naïve American sea captain who stumbles upon the remnants of a violent rebellion in a merchant Spanish vessel called San Dominick which carried black slaves, but fails to recognize the horrors that have occurred on board. Overflowing with symbolic richness and narrative complexity Melville manages to depict human depravity and moral relativism in little more than fifty pages.

    "Shadows present, foreshadowing deeper shadows to come." Benito Cereno

    Spanish or American. Captain or slave. Black or white. How disastrous the consequences are in the way we fill out those categories. And whereas I have read some opinions emphasizing the racist stereotypes of this short story, I can advocate in saying that the patronizing and limited views of the American sea captain are all proved wrong, one by one. Also in pointing out that although the African slaves can be seen as representatives of pure evil in the brutal way they kill his white masters, Melville also shows both how the mutineers of the San Dominick abide by America’s founding principles –“Live Free or Die” – and also how the barbarism of slavery gives way to other barbaric acts. And how the use of Christian imagery adds to the indictment of European Colonization in particular and Western arrogance and racism in general.

    In both stories we encounter a confident person who is unexpectedly confronted with the mysterious “other” that challenges his snug and comfortable outlook on life, testing his goodness in presenting him with morally ambiguous situations. His reactions, our reactions, need to derive far from beyond our individual self so we can embrace the different, who is starving for understanding, and become one in this richly atomized world we live in.

    ”But the past is passed; why moralize upon it? Forget it. See, yon bright sun has forgotten it all, and the blue sea, and the blue sky; these have turned over new leaves.”
    “Because they have no memory,” he dejectedly replied; “because they are not human.”
    Benito Cereno

  • Murat Dural

    Başlı başına ilginç bir öykü / novella. Zor yazılıp okunabilecekken ustalıkla örülmüş, harika dillendirilmiş, akışkan bir yapıya sahip. Kırmızı Kedi Yayınları tarafından yeniden çevrilip basılan Jorge Luis Borges'in "Babil Kitaplığı" serisi içinde yer alıyor. Bu bile başlı başına bu eseri çok değerli kılıyor.

  • AC

    Bartleby is an easy read and interesting. But Benito Cereno is much denser and complex both in construction and in its syntax and diction. I found this annoying at first, until I found my rhythm…. A fine and impressive piece of art!

  • N.T. Embeast

    This book, with its two stories, Bartleby and Benito Cereno, is not what I expected. What a dense read! For a book just barely making it over the 100-page mark, it took me forever to will myself through it! Look at the difference between the start date and the finish for this one! Every time I picked it up I felt like I was being forced to swallow lead, or to walk a mile in a pool of TAR. I felt like I was getting nowhere, anywhere, and fast. And, to my frustrated and wry surprise, I got exactly that.

    Herman Melville... I don't know what was his issue, but the man took things that could be explosive, and instead turned them into dust. If I were to choose a handful of words to describe this book, it'd be: "Dense. Gathering dust. Slowly sinking. Numbness." There was barely even the sensation of my frustrations until I reached the end of the book! It's so LOUDLY EMPTY. It's like having a block shoved through the side of your skull, one millimeter at a time, and every moment it sinks further and deeper in, you stop reacting... you lose your emotions... you stop thinking... you're just reading... you're just reading... you're just reading... you're just reading... you're ju--

    You see where I'm going here?

    The concepts were intriguing, I guess... *Seems a little reluctant to even give the book that* But GOD. With the way this man writes, I want to SHOOT myself to just get it over with! It's WORSE than watching paint dry! Or a snail cross the entire desert! Or having a staring contest for WEEKS ON END with a WALL. A perfectly BLANK... WHITE... WALL!!! *Flails a bit as her irritation abruptly gets the better of her* It's POINTLESS to read these books! POINTLESS! MELVILLE, HOW DARE YOU WRITE SUCH ABSTRACT INSANITY!! *Points a finger accusingly at him, breathing hard and one eye twitching uncontrollably for a moment*

    Okay. That aside, this review is highly unprofessional. I cannot stand the man's writing. It's the type of book where you read it, and your brain just shuts down. Completely. There are no thoughts, no care or concern for the story or its characters: you're just dead afterwards. My friend Rain Misoa said she read Moby Dick, and after struggling through TWO of Melville's short stories, I want to whirl on her incredulously and SHAKE her, DEMANDING how she sat through that MONSTER BOOK without ending up throwing herself off of a building!! Maybe only people who enjoy the morbid "Questions about the universe" penned in the underlying tones of these stories will care, but even a philosophy dork like me can't take stuff like this. -3-;; I just refuse to.

    If you want to give it a shot because it's a classic example of Melville's works, then go right ahead and be my guest, but there's no way I'm recommending this to anyone. =_e ...it hurts the brain too much.

  • paper0r0ss0

    Bartleby e Benito, due racconti dissonanti, belli di una bellezza diversa. Il primo, esistenzialista ante litteram, tutto giocato in interni, negli uffici asfittici e polverosi di una Wall Street ottocentesca, cercando di decifrare la mente di uno scalcagnato copista, remissivo quanto disperatamente cocciuto nel preferire di punto in bianco di non piu' vivere (e incrinare l'ordine costituito), l'altro ambientato negli spazi immensi e potenzialmente letali dell'oceano, su navi che racchiudono segreti e ambiguita' che solo il caso a volte permette di svelare.

  • Lidia

    Lo he escuchado en audiolibro y me ha encantado.

  • Kobe

    3.5 stars.

  • May Ling

    You can't give Melville less than 3 stars. He's just too darn good a writer.

    You can however doc stars for blatant racism. Wow! Racist. So racist I had to read the reviews and the sparks notes. And wow... even more Racist!

    Here's the deal. Some people say this book is about Melville trying to present the situation. The whole "we're going to be nice to the slaves but secretly they might kill us in their sleep argument." F-in' racist. The critics and Sparks notes present that he's portraying a social commentary about the nuanced condescension of whites allowing blacks some basic rights outside of chains while being carted off to work as slaves. I read it and you know what's condescending? Writing a book about slavery without actually making any of the slaves more than background characters. Dude... seriously?

    How are people missing exactly HOW racist this book is? It is the perfect example of modern racism. A bunch of privileged people talking about it, around it, but having no clue what it actually is, and thinking that their feigned empathy somehow means something. That is both in the book, the sparks notes, and many of the reviews. PAIN... FREAKIN... FULL.

    That said... beautifully written. For someone who is teaching a class about hidden, structural, or modern racism, this is a wonderful piece that could be a great source of discussion for those that do not understand the dilemma. To give someone rights is not the same as to see them colorblind as a political equal...especially if you secretly fear they will kill you in your sleep. True. Also, to write about slavery and racism where none of the protagonists are slaves, is just bad bad bad....!

  • Ozclk

    kâtip bartleby öyküsü gerek anlatımı gerek karakterin kisiligi ile beni çok kalın halatlarla yakaladı. mutlaka tekrar dönüp okumak isteyecegim bir oykuydu. lakin Benito, nasıl bir kitapta bu iki ayrı hissi yaşadım bilmiyorum, Benito beni yakalayamadı, haftalarca açtım açtım kapadım, aynı yerleri okudum okudum biraktim, sonunda vazgeçtim. Benito öyküsü ile gerçekten yıldızımız barismadi. belki bireysel olarak bir sorun yasamisimdir bilmiyorum. bir daha donmeyebilirim bu oykuye. Benito dan bağımsız, sadece katıp bartleby için 4 yildiz... tavsiye ederim.

  • Keri Solaris

    RTC

  • Rute Paulo

    O que eu achei de Bartleby; eu preferia não responder.

  • Vítor Leal

    Maravilhosa a ficção curta de Herman Melville. Moby Dick é o livro cimeiro, a sua obra-prima, embora Bartleby, Benito Cereno e o marinheiro Billy Budd sejam inesquecíveis.
    Billy Budd
    “entregava-se por vezes a um estado de espírito sonhador. Sozinho sobre a coberta, a barlavento, com uma mão a segurar o cordame, ficava a olhar perdidamente o mar sombrio. Se num desses momentos o viessem importunar com qualquer assunto de menos importância, daria sinais de maior ou menor irascibilidade, mas logo se dominaria. (...) o capitão Vere era uma personalidade excepcional. Ao contrário do que aconteceu a muitos famosos marinheiros ingleses, não se deixou absorver totalmente pela longa e árdua tarefa que exercia com exemplar devoção, não se limitou a viver o exercício da sua profissão. Tinha uma acentuada tendência pelas coisas intelectuais. Adorava livros e nunca empreendia uma viagem sem fornecer de novas obras a sua biblioteca, pequena, mas recheada do melhor. As solitárias horas de ócio, bem difíceis de suportar, a que por vezes, e mesmo quando em missões de combate, os comandantes estão sujeitos, nunca eram de tédio para o capitão Vere. O seu gosto literário não o levava a uma leitura mais agradável pela forma do que pelo conteúdo; as suas preferências iam para os livros que naturalmente atraem todos os espíritos superiores que ocupam um lugar de autoridade.
    Obras tratando do homem e dos acontecimentos de todas as épocas - biografias e história - e escritores independentes que claramente e sem convenções, como Montaigne, falam com bom senso das realidades tangíveis.”

  • Taylor Gibson

    So I decided to read both Melville's longest work and one of his shortest works this year. Both illustrate that Melville can turn a phrase. I could see how this book would potentially invoke an emotional response from some folks but the premise just seemed off. It struck me as neither sad nor comical. I was left feeling incredibly neutral upon completion.

  • Poet Gentleness

    I absolutely loved reading Bartleby. I haven't had the opportunity of reading Melville's novels before and I was greatly impressed by his work.
    I cannot do this review without spoiling quite completely the story. So, be warned! ;)

    Now, that I have told you almost the whole story, go read the book to know how its end if you haven't already guessed!
    Enjoy! ;)

  • Peter

    My Summer of Melville continues...

    This is the third or fourth time I've read Bartleby, and it's as wonderful as ever. One of my very favorite short stories. The maddening stubborness of Bartleby, the well-meaning helplessness of the narrator, and the heartbreaking conclusion just never get old for me.

    I had some reservations approaching Benito Cereno for the first time, having struggled for seven weeks to get through Moby-Dick. (A rewarding experience, but one I really don't care to repeat.) The thought of another Melville sea-story, so soon after Moby, felt somewhat ominous. But the novella length of Cereno eased my fears just enough to dive in. And I was rewarded with an enjoyably tense thriller, in which the American sea captain Amasa Delano chances upon a Spanish slave ship where outward appearances may not be quite what they seem. Melville beautifully depicts Delano's shifting perspective, as the protagonist's generous, optimistic nature struggles with the darker aspects of life aboard the Spanish ship whose dangers become increasingly hard for him to deny. Although the conclusion-via-legal-deposition device nearly derails the momentum of the narrative, the setting shifts back to just Delano and Cereno at the very end, and wraps matters up very nicely.

    This two-fer would get 4.5 stars overall - 5 for Bartleby, 4 for Benito Cereno. Very good reading.

  • Travis

    These to stories challenge the traditional and fixed definitions of good and evil.

    Benito Cereno and Babo are enslaved to their roles and cannot escape them. Which characters are moral? Can anything about a slave revolt at sea be moral? Violence only leads to more violence. It is difficult to tell whether Melville is making a statement about the injustice of slavery, or if he is portraying a cruel and unjustified rebellion.

    It is hard to view the slaves’ cruel and bloody mutiny as just; yet their enslavement cannot be morally correct, either. Benito Cereno, threaded with themes of grayness throughout, obscures traditional roles of black and white and clouds all morality and characters to a confusing gray.

    When asked to work, talk, explain, or do anything Bartleby’s responds with “I would prefer not to”. This does not highlight Bartleby’s preferences, but rather illustrates his lack of preference, and ultimately his refusal to live.

  • Yunusemre Yener

    Benito Cereno yaklaşık yüz sayfa olmasına rağmen bir kaç gün elimde süründü, okurken daha uzunmuş gibi hissettim. Hikayenin ortasından itibaren ise Melville’in olayı çözümleme ve ilerletme değil, başka bir şeyin peşinde olduğunu idrak ettim ve bu hikayeyi benim için daha okunabilir kıldı. (Kuşlar filmini izlerken “Sonunda ne olacak, bu kuşlar nereden gelmiş” hissiyatını bir kenara koyup süreci gözlemenin doğru okuma olmasına benzer bir geçiş diyeyim ) Gerçi sonunda yine bir çözüme kavuşuyoruz ancak sonradan hakkında okuduklarıma göre bu hikayeyi biçimsel olarak öncü yapan şey bu “güvenilmez anlatıcı” mevzusuymuş. Kaptan Delano’nun Benito ve gemisinde olanlar hakkındaki düşüncelerinin sürekli nasıl değiştiğini görüyoruz. Algının oluşumu ve değişiminin yakından bir incelemesi.
    Bu biçimsel yeniliğin yanında kölelik, insan doğası, kötülüğün doğası üzerine yoğun bir anlatım olduğunu söyleyebilirim.

  • Sarah

    What's sad is these stories have so much potential. The points they make could be really powerful, IF they were better developed. Both stories, in my opinion, were not very well written or structured. In English class, we painfully overanalyzed Melville's frequent use of double negatives in Benito Cereno, but we didn't even take into account that he used a ton of them in Bartleby too! How do we know that they aren't not un-a-part of his writing style? And, would it kill the guy to use a few more quotation marks?

    For what it's worth, I did enjoy reading Bartleby. The closing paragraph is what finally sold it to me. The plot of Benito Cereno is certainly thrilling, but I'm sorry, it was just too painful of a read to really enjoy. Why so many goodreads users gave it five stars is beyond my realms of understanding.

  • Jake Oelrichs

    These two stories, though very different, are basically about the same thing – rebellion. I grabbed this book for the classic and enigmatic short story Bartleby, but it was the second story, Benito Cereno, set on a merchant ship carrying slaves, that completely frickin blew me away. I had no prior knowledge of its plot, or the history it was based on so I was a sitting duck for Melville’s brilliant and ruthless deceptions. The suspense of this story is twofold – that of its plot, and that of being forced, as a reader, to wait and struggle to discern just exactly what Melville was saying about the subject matter.

    Toni Morrison wrote a nice article on this. Read Benito Cereno first! The article contains plot spoilers. 😉


    https://www.thenation.com/article/arc...

  • Mr. Bauer

    Benito Cereno is great. I love the suspense, anticipation, and the way Melville conveys his statements about society very subtly.

    Bartleby the Scrivener is rather strange. Again, Melville is certainly making a statement about society, particularly the new economic situation in America as it became more industrialized and capitalistic. I actually read this in college and had to analyze it from the point of view of each of the major schools of literary theory. Not fun!

  • André

    Albeit Bartleby was fantastic, Benito Cereno was exhausting. I literally forced myself to read page after page just so I could finally go read something else.
    I feel the two stories don't belong in the same book. The first makes you wonder what's going through Bartleby's mind and what his story is, but the second makes you just want to finish it as fast as you can.

  • Jim Elkins

    Re-read "Bartleby" in preparation for Vila-Matas's novel. It is strange, how pure Melville made the character: as if he had models of intermediate levels of purity that he knew should be rejected. But how could he have had such models?

  • Ryan Madman Reads & Rocks

    I can totally relate to Bartleby. Most office jobs suck.

  • Aurora Dimitre

    LOVED bartleby. i mean benito cereno's good too but it just doesn't hold that weight for me that bartleby does. like bartleby CONNECTED.