The correct answer is C.
Despite Bartleby being such a poor employee, Melville feels pity for him because he discovers that Bartleby is living in the office. The office is at Wall Street, a place that, according to Melville, is as desolate as a ghost town during nights and Sundays. He is affected by the loneliness of Bartleby's life and decides not to divulge his secret.
It'll be "fined" not find and it'll be "dollars"in place of dollar
It seems to me that that response is slightly arrogant. She asks for his opinion then immediately puts it down as if only hers are important. (Additionally, regressions is the only tool we have to <em>make</em> progressions, so not only is she arrogant, she's <em>wrong</em>.)
A. He is arrested for simply going for a walk
Hamlet's willingness to go with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern into a trap shows that he may be giving up. He knows the consequences he should face for killing Polonius and has not had the strength or courage to act against Claudius yet. It also is a point that he has descended further into a reality of the madness that he has been 'putting on'.