The Necklace

947 Words2 Pages

Ten years of suffering is the cost of having pleasure for only one night! In “The Necklace,” by Guy de Maupassant presents Mathilde Loisel, an attractive, charming but vacuous and selfish middle class lady transforms to selfness, poor, satisfied and hard-working lady. Even though, Mathidle owns a comfortable home and married to a faithful and kind husband, Monsieur Loisel, who seeks her happiness and satisfaction; she was ungrateful to the things that she had been given, because her greed and desire of wealth had captured her thoughts and blurred the real meaning of happiness in her perspective. Mathidle spends most of her time surfing in her day dreams of being wealthy and suffering from accepting the reality, because her imagination was more than she could not afford. One day Mathidle’s husband brought his wife an invitation for a fancy party, but as a result of their low income, Mathidle’s was ashamed to wear flowers as decoration, so she decided to borrow an expensive looking necklace from a friend of her, Madame Forestier. After attending the fabulous party and spending a memorable great time looking stunningly beautiful, Mathidle discovers that she had lost the expensive necklace that she borrowed, so she decides to buy a similar copy of the necklace to her friend after loaning an enormous amount of money and narrowing the house outcome. The author surprises his readers with a perfectly detailed twist at the end of the story. Losing the necklace was a turning point in Mathidle’s life and the best thing that ever happened to her. All that glitters is not gold. A lesson Mathilde Loisel had learned during her journey of discovering the greed. Greed is a curse that blocks people’s vision from seeing the realistic value of things... ... middle of paper ... ...ng of what came before it.” (Shmoop Editorial Team) Now that Mathidle discovered that the necklace was just an imitation did that mean that her suffering for ten years was pointless! But wait a second, what about the lessons that she have learned from her struggles. Mathidle would never have changed if she never had been exposed to a harsh situation that made her recognize how lucky she was. Works Cited: Maupassant, Guy de. "The Necklace." Trans. Marjorie Laurie. An Introduction to Fiction. Ed. X. J. Kennedy and Dana Gioia. 7th ed. New York: Longman, 1999. 160-66. .Johnson, Aisha. A literary analysis of "THE NECKLACE". Humanities 420 November 29, 2011. Web. December 10, 2013 kareyperkins.com Shmoop Editorial Team. "The Necklace Ending." Shmoop.com. Shmoop University, Inc., 11 Nov. 2008. Web. 10 Dec. 2013 Winfrey, Oprah. Oprah Winfrey quotes. goodreads.com

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