Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. After three days, Monsieur Loisel purchases the necklace. When Mathilde returns the necklace, in its case, to Madame Forestier, Madame Forestier is annoyed at how long it has taken to get it back but does not open the case to inspect it. Mathilde is relieved. The Loisels began to live a life of crippling poverty.

    • Themes

      She is finally the woman she believes she was meant to...

    • Character List

      He loves Mathilde immensely but does not truly understand...

  2. The next day they visit the jeweler whose name was on the necklace ’s box, but he says that the necklace didn’t come from him. The fact that the box misled the Loisels as to the origin of the necklace is a hint that the necklace might be a fake, and represents the danger of seeking truth in outside appearances.

  3. People also ask

  4. Loisel retraces their steps but cannot find the lost necklace anywhere. They realise that they will have to replace the necklace, whatever the cost. To buy them some time, they compose a letter to Madame Forestier, claiming that they are having the necklace repaired.

  5. Quick answer: The necklace is real diamonds. PDF Share. Expert Answers. Lorraine Caplan. | Certified Educator. Share Cite. First, Mr. and Mrs. Loisel assumed that the necklace was made of real...

    • Plot summary
    • Quotes
    • Facts
    • Analysis

    Mathilde Loisel is attractive and pretty, but unhappy, very unhappy. She believes that life has played her false. She feels relegated to a lower station than she deserves. She wanted to be appreciated and loved by some rich gentleman from a good family, but instead, having no dowry, she had to settle for a junior clerk in the Ministry of Public Ins...

    Madame Forestier is deeply touched. Taking both of her friends hands she says, Oh! My poor Mathilde! But mine was a fake. It was worth no more than five hundred francs!

    Madame Forestier takes Mathildes hands in her own and tells her the truth. The necklace that she had loaned Mathilde was mere costume jewelry worth only five hundred francs.

    Now that Madame Loisel knows true poverty, she shows herself to be made of something more valuable than her petty desires for surface flash have suggested. With heroism and pride, she shoulders her responsibility with her husband and for ten years does brutal manual labor until she has paid for the necklace. When the reader discovers that the neckl...

  6. There is just one problem: It's forty thousand francs (thirty-six thousand after bargaining), which is a ton of money. M. Loisel asks the jeweler to hold the necklace for them a few days. It turns out that M. Loisel has only 18,000 francs to his name, in the form of his inheritance from his father.

  7. The horrible irony of the fact that the Loisels spent years paying off a replacement for what was actually a worthless necklace is just one instance of irony evident in “The Necklace.” Also ironic is the fact that Mathilde’s beauty, which had been her only valued asset, disappears as a result of her labor for the necklace.

  1. People also search for