Plot[ edit ] Madame Mathilde Loisel has always imagined herself an aristocrat, despite being born into a lower-middle-class family which she describes as an "accident of fate". She marries a low-paid clerk who tries his best to make her happy but has little to give.
Maupassant uses a serious tone throughout the story. Even during the ball where Mme. Loisel finds herself the happiest, the reader gets the sense that some underlying misfortune is bound to happen.
This is especially since the ball is happening nearly exactly how Mme.
Loisel day dreamt it. She is the the most beautiful woman there, the center of attention, and dancing with all the men while her husband dozes in another room, allowing her to have what she wants, but we are still very much aware that this woman who has not yet learned about hard work will not have such ecstasy for more than one night.
Maupassant reminds of this by writing: He threw over her shoulders the wraps he had brought to go home in, modest garments of every-day life, the poverty of which was out of keeping with the elegance of the ball dress.
The Jewelry, a short story written by Guy de Maupassant explores this notion. In this story, M. Lantin, the chief clerk for the office of the . Guy De Maupassant's story "The Diamond Necklace" tells us a story about a poor girl who has wrong values in her life. She loves money, jewels, but not people. Throughout the story the main heroine Matilda Loisel makes a number of ironic discoveries. Guy De Maupassant’s story “The Diamond Necklace” tells us a story about a poor girl who has wrong values in her life. She loves money, jewels, but not people. Throughout the story the main heroine Matilda Loisel makes a number of ironic discoveries.
She felt this, and wanted to fly so as not to be noticed by the other women, who were wrapping themselves up in rich furs. The reminder of her poverty comes back to Mme. Loisel very soon after the dancing and she is desperate to escape it, quickly fleeing the place, and then later we learn her necklace has gone missing and perhaps it was lost in that moment Mme.
Loisel so desperately and carelessly ran out of the room. Loisel wishes so very much to escape her modest life for one of richness, she still has much to learn. Maupassant uses quite a bit of imagery and symbolism throughout the short tale, but perhaps the one that sticks out the most is of course the necklace itself.
Loisel had been honest about losing the necklace, then Mme. Forester would have hopefully told her the necklace was a fake and only worth francs versus the 40, francs Mme. Loisel and her husband paid to have it replaced.
Or on the reverse, if Mme. Forester had told Mme. Loisel in the first place it was mere costume jewelry than Loisel would have known to begin with the worth of the necklace, though given Mme.
The fact that Mme. Loisel learns the truth about the necklace after the ten years of hard labor allows Maupassant to make a point of how deception can lead to unnecessary pains in life.
Loisel it seems that such hard times were necessary for her to go from being a static character to one that has learned a valuable lesson. Loisel says to Mme. And now for ten years we have been paying for it. You will understand that it was not easy for us, who had nothing.
At last, it is done, and I am mighty glad. Loisel assisted in helping her husband pay back the debts this time, which serves as contrast to when she lost the necklace and he was the one to venture back into the cold to try and find it, despite having to be at work the next morning.
Loisel has learned the hardships of the poor and worked hard enough to become a more robust woman without the beauty she possessed at the beginning of the story, she still occasionally thinks back to the night of the ball.
Maupasant writes, But sometimes, when her husband was at the office, she sat down by the window and she thought of that evening long ago, of that ball, where she had been so beautiful and so admired.
This occasional thinking of her one night shows that the power of that night is something that has stayed with her, yet she only thinks of it sometimes now rather than her constant daydreams and woes as seen at the beginning of the story.
This is no longer a woman who gets upset at a party invitation because she has no pretty dress to wear. Deception has taught her a lesson of valuable labor and so she tells the truth to Mme. Forester at last, and finally learns what honesty could have gotten her long ago.The Jewelry, a short story written by Guy de Maupassant explores this notion.
In this story, M. Lantin, the chief clerk for the office of the . Maupassant's story concerns a woman, Mathilde borrows a diamond necklace to wear to a dance, for which her husband obtained a rare invitation.
When the necklace is lost, she decides, with her husband, to replace it rather than tell the truth. Guy De Maupassant’s story “The Diamond Necklace” tells us a story about a poor girl who has wrong values in her life. She loves money, jewels, but not people.
The Jewelry, a short story written by Guy de Maupassant explores this notion. In this story, M. Lantin, the chief clerk for the office of the . Guy De Maupassant's story "The Diamond Necklace" tells us a story about a poor girl who has wrong values in her life. She loves money, jewels, but not people. Throughout the story the main heroine Matilda Loisel makes a number of ironic discoveries. Guy de Maupassant's story "The False Gems" is often referred to casually as "The Jewelry." The story is about a man of modest means who is madly in love with his beautiful wife, who has a predilection for two things, the theater and false jewelry, both of which the narrator loathes.
Throughout the story the main heroine Matilda Loisel makes a number of ironic discoveries. Guy de Maupassant's story "The False Gems" is often referred to casually as "The Jewelry." The story is about a man of modest means who is madly in love with his beautiful wife, who has a predilection for two things, the theater and false jewelry, both of which the narrator loathes.
“The Necklace” by Guy de Maupassant However, “The Necklace” at first was published in the newspaper “ Le Gaulois” in Paris, France on February 17, It was a part of Maupassant’s collection of short stories called “ Tales of Day and Night”, which appeared in .
Guy De Maupassant's "the Necklace" Guy de Maupassant's "The Necklace" During the course of Guy de Maupassant's short story "The Necklace," the main character, Matilda Loisel, makes a number of ironic discoveries.