Yahoo Web Search

Search results

      • Attempting to appear richer than she truly is, Mathilde Loisel borrows a diamond necklace from her friend Jeanne Forestier and then loses it at a ball. She and her husband buy an expensive replacement on credit, return the replacement to the friend as though it’s the original, and then live ten years in poverty to repay their debts.
      www.litcharts.com › lit › the-necklace
  1. People also ask

  2. Just as Mathilde was oblivious to the small pleasures that her life once afforded her, she is oblivious to the fact that her greed and deception are what finally sealed her fate. A detailed description and in-depth analysis of Mathilde Loisel in The Necklace.

    • Character List

      Read an in-depth analysis of Monsieur Loisel. Madame...

  3. Quick answer: Mathilde Loisel is responsible for her own suffering in "The Necklace" because her superficial, materialistic desires influenced her to borrow the diamond necklace in...

  4. When she runs into Mme. Forestier on the Champs Elysée, Mathilde is proud to tell her that the debt has finally been paid off, only to discover that the necklace she replaced was made of paste. Mathilde’s primary character traits are her beauty, her vanity, and her social ambition, all of which play their part in leading her to her ruin.

  5. She refuses to try to be content with what she does have. Which is too bad, because, as she finds out when she loses the necklace, things can get a lot worse. Mathilde's poverty later in the story raises another question though. When Mathilde's poor, she certainly seems to be worse off.

  6. When Mathilde loses the necklace, Monsieur Loisel undergoes ten years of hard work and poverty in order to purchase a replacement. Madame Forestier: Madame Forestier is the wealthy friend of the Loisel’s who lends Mathilde the diamond necklace for the ball. She is generous to Mathilde. Character Analysis Examples in The Necklace: The Necklace. 🔒 20

  7. When the Loisels receive an invitation to an elegant party hosted by the Minister of Education, Mathilde buys an expensive gown and borrows a diamond necklace from Mme. Forestier so that she does not look “like a pauper in the middle of rich women.”

  8. Without a dowry or a point of entry into high society, she is unable to find a wealthy husband, and so she marries M. Loisel, a clerk who works for the Ministry of Education. The opening lines of “The Necklace” introduce Mathilde as an exceptionally beautiful woman with an ordinary social situation.

  1. People also search for