Once in prison Bartleby refuses to eat, and subsequently starves to death. After Bartleby dies, alone and imprisoned, we finally learn one little tidbit about his past: apparently, he previously worked in the Dead Letter Office (a section of the Post Office that gets rid of undeliverable mail). By just preferring not to live any longer, Bartleby announces his individuality in an ultimately fatal and dramatic ending. If he cannot live as he "prefers" to, he apparently doesn't want to live at all. In the end, we don't know what it was exactly that Bartleby "preferred," and we are left to ponder the mystery of his death.The narrator wonders if this horrifyingly depressing job might have affected Bartleby's sanity – and we, in turn, must wonder what makes all of us who we
Once in prison Bartleby refuses to eat, and subsequently starves to death. After Bartleby dies, alone and imprisoned, we finally learn one little tidbit about his past: apparently, he previously worked in the Dead Letter Office (a section of the Post Office that gets rid of undeliverable mail). By just preferring not to live any longer, Bartleby announces his individuality in an ultimately fatal and dramatic ending. If he cannot live as he "prefers" to, he apparently doesn't want to live at all. In the end, we don't know what it was exactly that Bartleby "preferred," and we are left to ponder the mystery of his death.The narrator wonders if this horrifyingly depressing job might have affected Bartleby's sanity – and we, in turn, must wonder what makes all of us who we