Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jeanne Forestier. Mme. Forestier is a well-to-do friend of Mathilde ’s from her convent-school days. She has a marvelous collection of jewelry and lets Mathilde borrow an expensive-looking necklace for the party. Mathilde loses and replaces the… read analysis of Jeanne Forestier. Previous.

    • The Necklace

      Analysis. Mathilde Loisel is a pretty and charming woman who...

  2. Mathilde Loisel. The protagonist of the story. Mathilde has been blessed with physical beauty but not with the affluent lifestyle she yearns for, and she feels deeply discontented with her lot in life. When she prepares to attend a fancy party, she borrows a diamond necklace from her friend Madame Forestier, then loses the necklace and must ...

  3. People also ask

  4. Analysis. In ‘The Necklace’, Guy de Maupassant explores the relationship between appearance and reality. The necklace, of course, is the most explicit example of this: it looks like a genuine diamond necklace but is actually an imitation or fake. And this final twist in the tale leads us to think more carefully about the other details of ...

    • Mathilde Loisel
    • Monsieur Loisel
    • Madame Forestier

    Mathilde Loisel is a dissatisfied woman, and this drives her conflict withherself and with others. She imagines living a more fantastical life than theone she was born into. She feels that there is a great discrepancy between thelife she shouldbe living based on her charm and beauty(which, based on textual evidence, is not imagined) and the life sh...

    From every indication, Monsieur Loisel is a dedicated husband. Although heis referred to in the diminutive as a “little clerk,” and despite the fact thathis wife is never seen engaging with him warmly, Monsieur Loisel makes ongoingefforts to please Mathilde and attempts to give her the life he knows shedesires. It is difficult for him to obtain the...

    Madame Forestier represents all Mathilde longs for. She is wealthy, andMathilde pulls away from their friendship because spending time with MadameForestier makes Mathilde “suffer” upon returning to her own home, which isn’tnearly as elegant. It is Madame Forestier who offers Mathilde her jewelry towear and who endures her friend’s highly selective ...

  5. Works of Realist literature often depict characters from middle or lower class society involved in everyday activities, rather than the heroic aristocrats of Romantic works such as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s Faust (1790) or François-René de Chateaubriand’s René (1802). Stylistically, “The Necklace” is a classic example of Realist ...

  6. Character Analysis. in. The Necklace. Mathilde Loisel: Mathilde is a dissatisfied housewife who dreams of a life of glamour and wealth. She feels trapped in a middle-class life and longs to for the life of riches that she believes she deserves. Monsieur Loisel: In contrast to Mathilde’s selfishness and greed, her husband demonstrates ...

  1. People also search for