The Necklace Analysis Essay

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The Necklace Essay People who are driven by greed end up focusing on what they do not have instead of being grateful for what they do have. This is relevant in the short story "The Necklace" by Guy de Maupassant because Mathilde Loisel ends up losing everything she owns just because she lets greed drive her decisions and get the best of her. When receiving an invitation to an extravagant ball, she declines because she says she does not have anything nice to wear. In the beginning of the short story she says, "There is nothing more humiliating than looking poor in the middle of a lot of rich women. (Maupassant)." The reader sees how she puts value in possessions and what others think of her. After finding a dress and then borrowing a necklace that she thought ...show more content... When she is given the opportunity to dress in extravagant clothing and act like she is wealthy, she found a "sense of triumph that is so sweet to a woman's heart" (3). Mathilda Loisel's change from the exposition of the short story to the rising action is dramatic. The reader's first impression of the character is that she is unhappy and resentful but at the party she comes off just the opposite. She was joyful and "danced wildly, with passion, drunk on pleasure, forgetting everything in the triumph of her beauty" (3). Mathilda Loisel's true character starts to reveal itself when the reader sees how much value she puts in possessions. The necklace serves as a symbol for greed. When Mathilda Loisel loses the necklace that she believed was worth forty thousand francs, she desperately retraces her steps and gets her husband to help her find it as well. It ends up taking ten years to pay off the debt. The ten years were hard on Mathilda Loisel and her husband, and Maupassant told the reader that she "looked old now... with hair half combed, with skirts award, and reddened hands" (6). However, even after the long ten years of manual labor all because she lost the necklace, she "sat down near the window and though of that evening at the ball so long ago, when she has been so beautiful and so admired" (6). The necklace symbolizes that when greed controls emotions and decisions, it never leads to good results. Mathilda Loisel's life is worse at the end of the short story than Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
The Necklace Essay "The Necklace" Around the world, values are expressed differently. Some people think that life is about the little things that make them happy. Others feel the opposite way and that expenses are the way to live. In Guy de Maupassant's short story, "The Necklace", he develops a character, Madame Loisel, who illustrates her different style of assessments. Madame Loisel, a beautiful woman, lives in a wonderful home with all the necessary supplies needed to live. However, she is very unhappy with her life. She feels she deserves a much more expensive and materialistic life than what she has. After pitying herself for not being the richest of her friends, she goes out and borrows a beautiful necklace from an ally. But as she ...show more content... She thinks that because her friend is rich and beautiful, that her material items would extend with that wealth. Instead, it shows Madame that even the richest of people do not always have to have genuine items. Madame realizes that she does have fun at the party even if she is not wearing all authentic things, the opposite of what she thinks she is wearing. A third ironic happening, is when she has been working to pay off the money for the necklace for a decade. Madame clearly admits to her friend on page 196 how she loses the necklace, and has been paying it back for ten years. As someone is reading the story, they will find it silly how Mme. is working for something when she is usually having people, mostly her husband, do things for her. Instead, she is working to pay off the money that she has spent on a replacement necklace. The turnout of the story changes Madame's views on how silly, textile items, are not always needed for someone to be happy. Outcomes in life are diverse for Madame, like her ideas of materialistic pieces in comparison to her husband's outlooks on important items. Guy emphasizes how Mme Loisel is not appreciating what she has in the right way as he uses juxtaposition to compare her to her husband, Mr. Loisel. A beginning example is the food that is set before them for dinner. Mr. Loisel seems to be very happy with his meal as he sits down and claims, 'Ah! A good stew! There's nothing I like better...' (pg 190). But Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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Literary Analysis Of The Necklace Going Into Depth With "The Necklace" "She was one of those pretty and charming girls, born, as if by an accident into a family of clerks" this is what Guy de Maupassant started "The Necklace" off by saying (Maupassant 221). Also, this helps describe the main character and to give the readers a visual of Mathilde Loisel. "The Necklace" is a short story that Mathilde Loisel, the main female character, wants to be a higher class than she really is. Mathilde's life drastically changes one night after she loses the necklace. Guy de Maupassant incorporates his use of the social class into the short story. One, noticeable part that plays a huge part in the theme is irony and/or suspense. In "The Necklace" the readers are suspenseful of if Mathilde will come out and tell the truth or try to cover up her steps. Mathilde hurries to find the diamond necklace that she has lost, and to find someone willing to work with her payment plan. Throughout this short story Mathilde faces hard tasks of work to receive the money until she can pay it off. Also, It was very suspenseful when overtime we watched Mathilde try to conquer her external conflict. Suspenseful was a feeling that took over most readers because most of them were worried that Mathilde's friend was going to find out about to lost of the necklace. Also, Ironically the necklace was fake causing all of Mathilde's hard work to be useless. Overall, this taught Mathilde a lesson. Another, noticeable part that plays a huge part in Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Necklace Literary Analysis Essay "The Necklace" Literary Analysis "In the last few years, the very idea of telling the truth [...] is dredged up only as a final resort when the alternative options of deception, threat and bribery have all been exhausted." Michael Musto, a journalist, columnist, and author, understood many people tell the truth when all other options are unavailable. In "The Necklace", a short fictional story written by Guy de Maupassant, a similar situation occurs. Characters are given the opportunity to speak the unvarnished truth; however, they choose a contrasting route. Essentially, Guy de Maupassant utilizes characterization, conflict, and irony to develop the theme, honesty is the best policy which, in turn, showcases itself throughout the story. Characterization is an important element to the advancement of the theme exclusively when Maupassant writes, "She didn't open the case, an action her friend was afraid of. If she had noticed the substitution, what would she have thought? What would she have said? Would she have thought her a thief?" From this excerpt, one can conclude Mathilde, the character who borrows the necklace, cares of what others think of her rather than the consequences of her actions. Instead of worrying ...show more content... An example is when the author writes, "'I... I... I've no longer got Madame Forestier's necklace.'" The reader does not expect Mathilde to lose the necklace; however, she does. "'Oh, my poor Mathilde! But mine was only paste. It was worth at the very most five hundred francs!'" The reader would have never perceived the necklace is fake. Consequently, if Mathilde would have told the truth, her and her husband would not have lost ten years of their lives repaying for an imitation necklace. By using situational irony, the author clearly presents "honesty is the best policy" especially in drastic Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
The Necklace Analysis The Necklace Analysis: Always Appreciate What You Have The short story "The Necklace" by Guy de Maupassant is about a young beautiful woman named, Mathilde who was born into a family of clerks but despite her station believed she deserved to live a life of wealth and luxury. She always dreamed of living a glamorous lifestyle; attending glamorous parties, engaging in charming conversations, and being admired by many. This story is set in France during the late 1900s. In this time women could not work for their status. A woman's status was solely determined on who she married. To Mathilde's disappointment, she married into the middle class. Every day she is tortured by the reality of her life. Her husband, Monsieur Loisel, is content with his status and belongings, unlike his wife, and works exceedingly hard to make Mathilde happy even if it means sacrificing his own. A necklace is a small item that turns out to be Madame and Monsieur's ultimate status downfall. Guy de Maupassant uses imagery, symbolism, and irony to show how greed and materialism can drastically effect one's life and character through the protagonist, Mathilde. This short story revolves around a young, beautiful woman named Mathilde who longs to live a life of wealth and luxury. She lives a simple life with her middle class husband who would do anything to please her. Even though her husband gives her everything he economically can, she still wants more. One day her husband came home with an invitation Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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Analysis Of The Story ' The Necklace ' Essay The short story "The Necklace" is one of the most significant stories that I believe the message through it is so powerful for women. "The Necklace" is a story about a woman named Mathilde Loisel that thought she was supposed to be born into a wealthy family and behaving like one. Unfortunately, the destiny of her life did not match with what she actually wanted–the luxurious life fill with happiness, attentions and jewelries. "She was one of those pretty and charming girls who are sometimes, as if by a mistake of destiny, born in a family of clerks." The first thing that we know about Mathilde from the first sentence of the story is that she seems that she was meant for a life of luxury and wealth, but oppositely born into a low middle–class family who parents were clerks. She was also married to a little clerk at the Ministry of Public Instruction. The real conflict between what she wanted to be represent out of her life and what really are established in her life happened when her husband brought back an invitation letter to a ministerial ball. Mathilde prepared her best, from her dress to the jewelry that she wears to look magnificent at the ball. Then, everything changed her life and her eagerness towards wealth after the calamity that she lost the necklace that she borrowed from Mme. Forestier. After reading the whole story and understanding the idea of the author, I believe that the story thought me, that the pride of being a women is not only been measured from the Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Necklace Analytical Essay The Necklace by Guy de Maupassant is about a middle–class woman, Madame Loisel, who feels as though she is entitled and deserving of the luxuries of an upper–class life. Monsieur Loisel obtains an invitation to a Ministry ball where Madame Loisel is finally able to dress and portray the image of the woman she desires to be. Included in her attire for the evening was a diamond necklace she borrowed from a friend. After returning home at the end of the night, she discovers that she is no longer wearing the necklace . She and her husband search for the necklace, but with no luck decided to buy a replacement to return in place of the original necklace. The couple borrowed around eighteen thousand francs in order to buy the replacement. This put ...show more content... (7) Madame Loisel spends most of her time wishing to be a member of the wealthy elite. At the Ministry ball, she is given the chance to appear as such, and she plays the part well and she celebrates the "triumph of her beauty, in the glory of her success, in a sort of cloud of happiness" (Maupassant 4) The outfit Madame Loisel puts together along with her flashy jewelry, and natural beauty, she becomes a different person for one night. Fonseka states, "Their characters may not have any significant virtues, but as far as they appear in a rich outfit they are recognised as respectable persons in society." The falsehood of the necklace that Madame Loisel borrows illustrates how she is able to arrange her clothing for one night in order to appear as a respectable person in society and how her appearance is false in parallel with how this hierarchical society Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
The Necklace Analysis Imagine someone being at a sales stand looking for something stunning, browsing through the beautiful selection of diamonds and gems. In the corner of her eye, she sees one of the most dazzling piece of jewelry ever made. The woman automatically grabs and buys the necklace with joy thinking of how amazing she will look. This moment is how Mathilde felt in the text, "The Necklace" by Guy de Maupassant. But sometimes good things come to an end and this, unfortunately, is one of those times. In this tragic tale of lust and loss, a beautiful woman named Mathilde, born into a family of wealth, seems to let her need to feel important get over her head and cause misery for the future years to come. Mathilde was a very pretty lady, but with no hopes of marrying a wealth handsome man she allowed herself to be married to a clerk in the ministry of education. This seemed to eat at her as she lived on with this man. She believed she deserved luxury and a life full of riches. However, this notion wasn't possible with the man she was with. The spare time she had was always spent thinking about what she could have done with her life. She dreamed of "silent antechambers, heavy with Oriental tapestries, lit by torches in lofty bronze sockets." She knew this lifestyle wouldn't ever be hers though. All of her dreams would soon become impractical. Her husband came home excited about receiving a request for them both to come to the Ministry. She becomes furious after he hands her the Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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marxism in the necklace Textual Analysis of "The Necklace" In "The Necklace", Guy de Maupassant uses a woman's life, and very important event in it, to depict the Marxism of his or her lifetime, especially amongst women. He uses comparisons and downfalls of her life to depict society's shortcomings and beliefs of class. Marxism looks at the economic and social structures of a society and the draws attention to the struggles between the classes. A Marxist might believe that people are born as creations of economical or social positions. Born to a family of clerks, Mrs. Mathilde Louise was beautiful by looks, but felt as if she was not because she could not afford to dress well, eat well, or live well. She felt everything she had was ugly and until she was rich ...show more content... She wants and is obsessed with what she believes she should have, but does not. She dream of being part of the rich society and in a way this necklace made her feel as if she was part of it. This piece of expensive and beautiful jewelry showed social structure and classes and how they worked, but so did her actions, thoughts, and how she carried herself at the ball. When it was time for the ball Guy de Maupassant uses Mathilde to show Marxism again by the way she acts and carries herself. The story says "She danced with delight, with passion, intoxicated with pleasure, thinking of nothing, in the triumph of her beauty, in the glory of her success, in a sort of cloud of happiness made up of all these tributes, of all the admirations, of all these awakened desires, of this victory so complete and so sweet to a woman's heart." (Maupassant, 70). The ball itself was a peak into the life of the upper class and she thought that this was what the upper class life was about. In her mind the rich life was a big ball or party in a sense, people had depicted in her mind and made her believe this is what it is like. He depicted her as being in heaven almost in her dreams but it was real, for that small amount of time she could be who she had always wanted to be but the next day she was still married to a clerk schoolteacher. After the ball she realizes that she has lost the thing that brought her up to the upper class, the necklace. After the party Mathilde Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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Analysis: The Necklace Identify/summarize grade level, subject area, objective of the lesson and materials needed:clarify and take more risks; make sure to rephrase in better ways, not necessarily correct but guide them to a more effective answer; restating it The lesson is intended for a 9th or 10th grade English or Language Arts class. The objective of the lesson is to understand and be able to explain the three types of irony: verbal, situational, and dramatic. Material needed are various handouts (2 handouts on irony, The Necklace short story , vocab for the sheet The Necklace, and the exit ticket for each student). A: To begin the class, I would write all of the objectives of the class time on the board, then make sure to go over them in cursory detail. This ...show more content... Take a moment at the beginning or the end of the class period to see that the student wrote it down in some way, and have access to it on blackboard.com or another calendar the student will have access to when they get home. A: In the opening warm–up, I would put in a place accommodation for students with Executive Functioning Issues is that on the warm up handout, make sure to reiterate the instructions and then make sure to type up on the warm up sheet of what the directions are explicitly stated. The intent of the accommodation of the warm–up is to make sure there is little ambiguity to help the student stay on task and to understand the short term goals at hand. M: In the opening warm–up, a modification for this setting is to have the student work in a smaller group. Not only with this have the student engaged more in the worksheet, but also will keep the student on task because with the less amount of students they will have to answer more questions and remained focused. Also, during this time, have a timer set in order for the student to have a visual reminder of how many minutes they have left before they all come back for group Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
Analysis of "The Necklace" Essay Bickford English 1102 6 February 2006 Analysis of "The Necklace" Many women dream of living a rich life, full of luxury, riches and servants. In the short story "The Necklace" by Guy de Maupassant, a middle–class woman named Madame Loisel desires that life style very much. In " The Necklace " Madame Loisel's vain desires cause many conflicts and her ultimate downfall. One small conflict in the story is Madame Loisel vs. her husband. He is always trying to make his wife satisfied and she never appreciates him or their way of life. De Maupassant makes this clear in the beginning by telling the reader that "she let herself be married to a little clerk" (p77). The word "let" indicates her unhappiness with her marriage to him. He ...show more content... She asks her husband for four hundred franks to buy a dress for the ball and he agrees. He had been saving that money for himself, but instead he chose to make his wife happy. She is very excited about going to a ball and having an elegant dress. She knew that would be her chance "to please, to be envied, to be charming, to be sought after" (p78). However she realizes three days before the ball that she has no jewelry to wear and that her husband cannot afford to spend any more money. Her husband suggests wearing a nice flower, but Madame Loisel would feel like the flower would show her that she cannot afford real jewelry and that she is the lowly wife of a clerk. At the last moment, she remembers her rich friend and she goes to her to ask her if she could borrow some jewelry. Her friend agrees to let her borrow a necklace that appears to be made of diamonds. All of Madame Loisel's desires are fulfill at the ball. She charms everyone and her beauty is recognized. She is happier than ever because she has fulfilled her vain desires. She has finally lived her dream. All of her acts show her desire for the upper class life. Her next act, however, causes her downfall. Her greed and pride finally catch up with her after the ball and she and her husband become victims of her greedy desires. When Madame Loisel arrives at home she realizes that she lost her friend's necklace. Her husband relentlessly searches, but Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Necklace Situational Irony Analysis "Well, that was ironic!" The Necklace by Guy de Maupassant uses irony to create a mood of surprise when Mathilde begins to cry when she receives the invitation and when Forestier doesn't know that her necklace had been replaced. One of the early examples of situational irony is when Mathilde started to cry when she gets her invitation. Mathilde is slightly poor and is always complaining about what she has. You would think by the way she complains all the time she would be ecstatic, but instead, she cries because she doesn't want to go. This is an example of situational irony because you expect her to be happy and excited but instead, she is sad, and situational irony is when you expect something to happen and then the opposite happens. Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Necklace Analysis "The Necklace" Analysis Plot Analysis – The plot analysis of (Exposition) "The Necklace" by Guy de Maupassant, take places in the late 1800s when Mathilde Loisel and her husband decides to go to a ball. The importance of the place is so you can get the whole catch of how royal Mathilde is supposed to be at the ball and i'll tell you she pulled it off for she was the only most beautiful woman there but surprisingly it wasn't all of the necklace that made her shine that night she already had beauty on her all she needed was a splendid dress to wear, gorgeous shoes to wear, and of course her hair all pretty up for the ball.The main character in "The Necklace" is considered round character, she was one of those pretty and charming girls, born as if by an accident of fate, into a family of clerks. Really this is all saying that Mathilde is to gorgeous to not have jewels or a rich hot clothes or even a big extraordinary house. The main character is also dynamic: "Her friend gave a cry, "oh poor Mathilde, how you've changed!" "Yes, I've had a hard time since last seeing you. Now if you read this story you would understand why the character change How? Well just by getting everything she dreamed of being noticed by other famous rich people at the ball or getting the jewels she deziuers to have to show off really. (Conflict) One of the main conflicts in "The Necklace" is man vs self how Mathilde brings herself down about how poor she is and how her cloths are, even she cries how her apartment is.Mathilde just really wants a better life to live to be rich and have more friends than one, but most importantly she just wants to be noticed by people. Another man vs self is when Mathilde loses her rich friend Madame Forestier necklace. Mathilde feels like her life is over because she lost the necklace, she feels like without the necklace she won't be noticed or beautiful without it. (Climax) When Mathilde loses the necklace somewhere at the ball everything tends to go down hill with stress, going around place, counting money, and going to every jeweller they could find. (Resolution) When Mathilde faces Madame Forestier's when she explains how she lost the necklace and how Mathilde and her husband went to every jeweller to Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Necklace Rhetorical Analysis In "The Necklace", Guy de Maupassaut uses the irony with the necklace to criticize Madame Loisel's need to make a false impression and her equally false desires. Madame Loisel shows her desire for everything throughout this short story. Guy de Maupassant uses an angry tone showing the reader he disapproves of Madame Loisel actions and need for attention. In the beginning of this short story , Guy describes Madame Loisel as "one of those pretty and charming girls born" (CITATION). Guy de Maupassant immediately lets the reader know Madame Loisel is incredibly beautiful. Her husband even says "Why the dress you go to theatre in. It looks very nice to me" (CITATION), yet Madame Loisel does not care. Madame Loisel needs to make a false impression Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Necklace Rhetorical Analysis The Necklace is an engaging short story, making hearty use of irony to convey essential ideas. Guy de Maupassant's famous short story "The Necklace" makes use of various forms of diction to display Madam Loisel's vain and longing personality to the reader. With uses of dialogue, thought, action, and the pursuit of more than what she has, Loisel's conceited disposition, regards to the grandeur of vanity, and suffering wishes for a life full of easiness and luxury are conveyed. In the first page, Maupassant says, "She was one of those pretty, charming young women who are born, as if by an error of Fate, into a petty official's family." Here, it is implied that Loisel was destined for higher nobility from birth, and should have been born into a more remarkable family. With the adjectives pretty and charming, it is revealed that she is not average. Madame Loisel knows these things, and she always is imagining a higher, grander life, of riches, materialistic items, and fine luxuries. ...show more content... She suffered from the poorness of her house, from its mean walls, worn chairs, and ugly curtains. All these things, of which other women of her class would not even have been aware, tormented and insulted her." Within this, a suggestion that Loisel is indignant, feeling herself to be higher than her birth, it is insinuated that she is vain and does not believe that she should have to suffer under the yoke as other women of her class do. Whereas most of her social class would bear it humbly and not complain, she continues to pursue the life she craves. She is elegant and charming and pretty, but she is also, on a deeper aspect, vain and jealous and indignant. When the chance comes for her to attend the ball, she takes her husband's savings of four hundred francs without a second thought, using it to buy her own Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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Theme Analysis of Maupassant's The Necklace Essay Guy De Maupassant's short story "The Necklace" remarkably demonstrates how misfortune can lead to self improvement through the character Mathilde Loisel. Madame Mathilde was one of those beautiful and delightful young ladies with not very many high expectations, achievements, and no way to be accepted into the elaborate society and lifestyle in which she finds herself daydreaming about day and night. In Guy De Mauspassant's ` The Necklace ," the author examines the theme of how learning a difficult lesson about honesty can impact someone for the rest of their life. The author also examines the theme through the use of his title, the characters who act out the events, and the plot. "The Necklace" plays a larger role than just the ...show more content... Throughout the story the title "The Necklace" becomes several other symbols, for example when Mathilde loses the necklace and makes the decision to be dishonest, the necklace becomes a symbol of Mathilde's greed and the severe consequences that came with it. After all, the necklace is the reason why Mathilde's life went into extreme poverty and unhappiness. Mathilde's daydreaming and longing for a wealthy lifestyle starts to not only affect her, but her friendships and her relationships around her as well. Mathilde's husband is considered a middle class clerk in the Ministry of Education and seems to be perfectly happy with his average lifestyle. Even when things were considered out of his financial reach, Mathilde's husband was always trying everything in his power to please her. "God, but your silly! Go to your friend Mrs. Forrestier and ask her to lend you some jewelry. You know her well enough to do that." (The Necklace, Pg 7) When Matilde's husband suggests that she borrow some jewelry from one of her wealthy friends, he really had no idea what a terrible mistake he was making at the time. Mathildas envy and desire to be wealthy and to live a lavish lifestyle becomes a much larger problem, when she can no longer visit her friends because of the suffering and jealousy she would experience afterwards. But when Mathilde asked her wealthy friend to borrow some jewelry, she did not seem to experience any suffering, misery, or even Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Necklace Analysis The story "The Necklace" by Guy de Maupassant shows greed can take away your view of happiness and enjoyment from your life. The writer developed the story in which the lesson is learned at the end. It shows the life and hopes of a ordinary girl Madame Loisel who dreams of being dressed with diamonds and extravagant dresses. Her dignity causes her constant discomfort in life. "She had a friend, a former school–mate at the convent, who was rich, and whom she did not like to go and see anymore she suffered so much when she came back." (pg 1) Showing the letdowns in Madame Loisel's life, there is a image created of her want for wealth. The story uses irony in order to describe her situation in life, her empty feelings, and the consequences greed can lead to. The story is introduced with the statement "for women have no caste or class, their beauty, grace, and charm serving them for birth or family... and put the slum girl on a level with the highest lady of the land."(pg 1) Madame Loisel thinks that she was born for every luxury, but due to not marrying a wealthy man this cannot become a reality for her. She dreams of being loved by many men and the center of their universe. Madame Loisel's love of herself are very large to her status as a individual. Despite her desires, she marries a clerk in the Ministry of Education who is an average man.. The problem with Madame Loisel is that she doesn't hold the attributes of a woman in the upper social class. The irony is that if Madame Loisel had obtained these characteristics, she could have married up and had the luxury lifestyle she desires. When Madame Loisel's husband receives an invitation to a ball thrown by the ministry, Madame Loisel is feeling sad because she does not have the proper outfit for the event. "Instead of being delighted, as her husband had hoped, she threw the invitation spitefully on the table with disdain, murmuring."(pg 2) Despite being invited to such a great event she feels she cannot attend. Due to not having a glamorous dress like all the other women who will be attending the event. Her husband than feels bad for his wife and decides to give her his savings in order to purchase a new dress. She then wants the perfect necklace to Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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Analysis Of The Story ' The Necklace ' The necklace is an interesting story to read despite the fact of how the main character can get under your nerves. While there might be many things that stand out, to me the irony in the story stand out the most and you can find many cases of irony throughout the story. short story for students states that it is ironic that she – Madame Loisel – is excluded from the upper society because of class despite her beauty (short story for students, 5/171); LitFinder contemporary collection states that if she had accepted her way of life and went to the ball as she is without trying to become someone she wasn 't, everything would have been fine and she wouldn 't have to go through all that trouble later on. It is also ironic that if she had been satisfied by the sacrifice her husband made for her and was content with just the new dress, she wouldn 't have become poorer than she ever was. At the beginning of the story, we can clearly tell that Loisel is a beautiful woman, but ironically she was born into a poor family. "She was one of those pretty and charming girls born, as though fate had blundered over her, into a family of artisans" ( fiction 100, 849). Being beautiful is wonderful, but because of how low she is on the social standing, she can 't mingle with those who are higher than her. "In a society that so highly values appearance, it is ironic that the beautiful Madame Loisel is excluded from society because of her class standing" (short story for students). It is like fate Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Necklace Quote Analysis Based on the story, "The Necklace," by Guy de Maupassant, Mme. Loisel was a materialistic, manipulative woman in the beginning. "She grieved incessantly, feeling she had been born for all the little niceties and luxuries of living" (Guy de Maupassant 11). This quote proves how she loves materialistic objects. Mme. Loisel started out as a manipulative wife . She said to give the card to someone who has a dress. Hinting to buy it for her. She thought of a cost that was high, but not too high that it drives her husband away (that is almost the exact definition of manipulative). She takes his money and treats him as if he's a beggar. While the story progressed the quality of Mme. Loisel, started to change for the better. She worked as hard as a Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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