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  1. 9) In your opinion, why do the Loisels decide not to tell Madame Forestier about the loss? What does this tell you about their characters? They did not tell I think because they wanted to keep their word and they didn't want her to loose the trust she has for them. this tells us that they are loyal people for trying to return the necklace to her.

  2. 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 ...

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  4. 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.

  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...

  6. The Necklace. Published in 1884 in a French newspaper, “The Necklace” features Maupassant’s trade-marked twist ending. In the short story, Mathilde Loisel is an attractive young woman who believes she deserves better in life. Despite being financially better off than many, she is constantly haunted by her desires for fineries that are ...

  7. The Necklace. She was one of those pretty and charming girls who, as if by a mistake of destiny, are born in a family of employees. She had no dowry, no expectations, no means of becoming known, understood, loved, wedded by any rich and distinguished man; and so she let herself be married to a petty clerk in the Bureau of Public Instruction.

  8. Nov 21, 2020 · The Necklace. Madame Mathilde Loisel has always imagined herself an aristocrat, despite being born into a family of clerks (which she describes as an "accident of fate"). Her husband is a low-paid clerk who tries his best to make her happy but has little to give. Still, the young couple can afford the services of a young Breton girl as a servant.

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