Bartleby is a clerk in a Wall Street law office who is essentially having a nervous breakdown. He categorically refuses to do any of the work assigned to him, and over time, it becomes clear that he has taken up residence in the office. Still, the lawyer who runs the firm keeps him on, mostly out of pity.
To be sure, Bartleby's interactions with his officemates are hilarious. But they also show how work is never just work. An organization is ultimately a community of people whose lives and struggles become tied up together, and they can either motivate each other to succeed — or drag each other down.
While it was originally published in 1853 as two parts in Putnam's Magazine, today it's available as a standalone story.