The Necklace by Guy de Maupassant


The Necklace
Title : The Necklace
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1568461933
ISBN-10 : 9781568461939
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 48
Publication : First published February 17, 1884

After devoting their energies and income for ten years to replacing a borrowed diamond necklace which they have lost, a woman and her husband learn the irony of their efforts.


The Necklace Reviews


  • Meghna Agrawal (On a Review-Writing Break!)

    Are you willing to dwindle away your invaluable life for coveting expensive, precious, materialistic possessions?
    Yes, or no?

    Whatever may be your answer, do read this short story baring the avaricious and mercenary female, Mathilde, and bringing her face-to-face with her own shallowness, but alas, she fails to learn, becoming more penurious than what she was, both materialistically and morally!

    “The Necklace”
    is a remarkably compelling story teaching the readers lessons on appearance vs reality, avarice and it’s evil-outcome, beauty and the mirage, covetousness for material possessions and the ephemeral superficial delight that comes along!
    It is a hands-down blockbuster 5-star read for me! 😊

    Mathilde
    , born to a low-class, with no money for a dowry, is married to Monsieur Loisel, a clerk!

    “She suffered ceaselessly, feeling herself born for all the delicacies and all the luxuries.”

    She thought herself entitled to all the luxuries, and indefatigably aimed for all the opulence!

    She despises her married life, is discontented with the food on the stove, wails over her lack of fine clothing, and jewelry.
    In short, she whines and wails for the lack of the worldly items, she perpetually craves!
    One day she manages to go to a lavish ball by borrowing a necklace from a wealthy friend, Madame Forestier.

    Finally losing the necklace, spending the rest of the ten years of her life toiling arduously in order to pay back the debts for the acquired fake necklace (replacing the original with a fake). After all, she had to pay back the purchase price of the fake!
    What happens towards the end simply blew me away, leaving me gob-smacked! :-O (Concealing spoilers)!


    Irrespective of being blessed with a pretty decent life, in the beginning, having food on the stove, living in a decent little apartment, bestowed by a loving dutiful husband who has a steady modest job, she is not appreciative of any of these, instead covets for more.
    She lusts for sensual pleasures without paying heed to the real treasure that she already owns!
    Constantly craving for the sensually stimulating, the worldly appealing possessions, aiming for the grandiose facade she can’t afford.
    The irony is towards the end, she ends up owning even lesser than what she possessed in the beginning.


    In my eyes her husband, M. Loisel, is the champion, the epitome of martyrdom, a sacrificial goat!

    He incessantly toils unremittingly, just to provide comfort to his wife, and to bring a smile to her face. With what little meager resources he has, he tries re-paying back for the catastrophe brought about by his wife’s nuisance and folly of losing the necklace. He works additionally during the evenings apart from his regular job, taking up loans. It is just not to fill up the disaster for the lost necklace, but he also gives all the money for her dress for the ball, at the cost of his own wishes for himself.
    I perpetually felt sorry for him throughout the read. He sets out on the mission of finding the necklace during the night, and does everything possible without complaining or whining! He did everything out of love and duty. Everyone appeared to be more sensible but for Mathilde!
    Instead of yearning for the spiritual/emotional/intellectual life, she hankers for the superficial life, thus being the reason for her own downfall, ensuing to be more downtrodden and penurious than she was before. She lacks big time on pragmatism and lives a life of fantasy and greed! Emblematic of being a woman of vain and foolishness, overly attached to the material mundane!

    NB-
    She couldn’t even stay honest with her friend, upon losing the necklace, she tries to conceal the truth by replacing the original with the fake!
    Hence, she had to pay for the rest of her life, just for being dishonest ☹
    Instead of submitting to the urge of sharing the twisted ending, I appeal to everyone who hasn’t read this brilliant story, to go and devour it without any further delay!
    In this story the flag-bearer is the inanimate necklace, bringing life to this story of a female filled with avarice, dishonesty, folly, and immaturity! A short story with a gobsmacking twisted-ending, delivering plentiful of morale!

    I was left captivated and flabbergasted by this charming necklace manufactured by Guy De Maupassant!

  • Glenn Russell




    I think of all the millions of high school students, like myself, who were assigned to read Guy de Maupassant’s The Diamond Necklace and then participated in the ensuing class discussion on such themes as envy, greed, materialism, symbolism and irony. When I listened to the teacher talk about the story, there was something gnawing deep down inside me I couldn’t articulate – something about the story, some important element, that wasn’t being addressed in the teacher’s analysis. My teacher, Mrs. Martin, was a good teacher – she dutifully listed on the board Maupassant’s progression, step by step, as to why The Diamond Necklace is the perfect story. But something, I sensed, was missing.

    Oh, how I wish I could project myself back into that high school class. I’d note how all those many men and women who have ever lived out their lives on the face of the earth, expending so much of their emotional and physical energy, gnashing of teeth, fretting, worrying, calculating, wearing themselves down year after year, all in efforts to accumulate wealth or impress others or force the details and rhythms of life to pattern themselves to accord with their own wishes, share Mathilde’s fate when they are told on their deathbed by life itself “All of what you worked so hard for was only paste.”

    Link to Guy de Maupassant's The Diamond Necklace:
    http://www.eastoftheweb.com/short-sto...

  • Adina

    A short story with a few powerful messages. One concerns vanity of women of the era and a second important one has to do with speaking the truth when you get the chance.

    I enjoyed the story enough that I decided to read more by the author. I listened to The Necklace as part of an audiobook narrated by the wonderful George Guidall which includes 4 more short stories and a novella. I will listened to the whole thing and will write more about the author when I'm done.

  • Sandra

    Short and captivating story about a wife (Mathilde) whose husband tells her they are invited to a ballroom party. He really thought this invitation would please his wife. But she doesn't want to go because she has nothing to wear. (She wishes she was wealthy and wants better things in life.) Her husband gives her money to buy a new dress and she borrows a beautiful diamond necklace from a friend, which she loses later that night...

    I don't want to give the rest of the story away since it is very short. It's sad how a lost necklace changed the course of this couple's life. (Maybe Mathilde should have appreciated what she had in life and shouldn't have tried so hard to impress others. I felt sorry for her husband.)

  • Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽

    Diamonds may not be a girl's best friend.

    description

    My initial rating of this 1884 short story by the French author Guy du Maupassant was 3 1/2 stars, but after rereading it, I'm bumping it up to 4 stars, maybe even 4 1/2.

    I first read "The Necklace" in a college English short story course, more years ago than I want to say. The professor was rather odd and had (I thought) an undue hang-up with making the students try to distill the meaning and theme of each story into a sentence that we would offer up to the rest of the class for dissection. But it was one of my more memorable college courses, and this is one of the more memorable stories we read in that class. Only a few of those stories have really stuck with me through the years. "The Necklace" is one of them. (
    A Rose for Emily is one of the others.)

    This is an uncomfortable, maddening short story: Mathilde Loisel is bourgeois, married to an unimportant clerk. But she is beautiful and graceful and certain that she was meant for better things.

    She suffered intensely, feeling herself born for every delicacy and every luxury. She suffered from the poverty of her dwelling, from the worn walls, the abraded chairs, the ugliness of the stuffs... She had no dresses, no jewelry, nothing. And she loved nothing else; she felt herself made for that only. She would so much have liked to please, to be envied, to be seductive and sought after.
    Then one day her opportunity to be noticed, and surrounded by riches, arrives: her husband brings home an invitation to a party given by the Minister of Education. Mathilde manages to get the money for a new dress from her husband, who gives up his own dream of a new gun and a hunting vacation, and borrows a beautiful diamond necklace from a rich friend from her school days. And she has the time of her life at the party, until ... well, go read the story for yourself. It's very short. (
    Here's an online version.)

    This story may have stuck with me for so long mostly because of the unexpected ending, but it also says some important things about our values, and pride, and human nature. Appearances may be deceiving, in more ways than one. What we sometimes think is important in our lives may not be at all. And things - or people - that we sometimes fail to appreciate enough may be where the real value lies. Monsieur Loisel only appears around the edges of the story, but he's the character I feel the most sympathy for.

    Guy du Maupassant died at only age 43, in an asylum, suffering from the effects of syphilis. His epitaph, which he wrote: "I have coveted everything and taken pleasure in nothing." Coming from the person who had enough insight to write "The Necklace," I find that intensely sad.

  • Swrp

    ||.Peace of mind. Being Satisfied. Staying Contented.||

    These words, for most among us, will sound stupid, silly, boring, out-of-fashion, cowardly and unworthy. Yet, these are the ones that can give us a good night's sleep, a hearty smile and healthy and long life!



    Guy de Maupassant's The Diamond Necklace. First published in 1884.

    There is a comparison of this story with O Henry's The Gift of the Magi, and that is quite surprising. There is a big difference between losing everything and doing something for a loved one and for satisfying one's ego and desire. It may be easy to say this, but surely human wants are unlimited, and sometimes the basic needs are also ignored to satisfy a desire.

    "How strange and changeful is life! How small a thing is needed to make or ruin us!"

    The Diamond Necklace is a very simple and also a very important story. It has to be read by those of all ages and also at regular intervals in life, to keep ourselves grounded and content. The pitfalls of going after luxuries and 'overdraft' are always a burden, shall end in regret and, in most cases, choke and drown.

    From the GR blurb: A husband and wife enter into a life of hardship in order to repay the debt incurred in replacing a borrowed diamond necklace only to learn, ten years later, the irony of their situation.

  • Maureen

    Mathilde is unhappy with her domestic circumstances, she has a desperate desire for the better things in life, but events lead to quite the opposite. There’s a hard lesson to be learned here!
    Published in 1884 by Guy de Maupassant, it’s free here
    http://www.eastoftheweb.com/short-sto...

  • Leonard Gaya

    “Diamonds are a girl’s best friend”… While that may be so, The Necklace (1887) takes this premise and turns it on its head. Indeed, this morality tale starts like Cinderella: a young woman of humble social status dreams of a fancy lifestyle and exotic settings while struggling to make ends meet. One day, she gets an invitation to a ball at the Ministry. But instead of a fairy godmother, Mathilde Loisel (Maupassant’s heroine) has a third-rate clerk for a husband and an affluent friend with a jewellery box.

    Mathilde’s situation, of course, is agony to her as she believes herself to be the victim of an unjust fate. In short, The Neckless is the story of a woman who grapples with quixotic fantasies. And, in a sense, Mathilde Loisel is as close a relative to
    Emma Bovary as her husband is to
    Akaky Akakievich. Like Flaubert and Gogol, Maupassant will test his characters to the limit. The least I can say is that the end of the story—in the vein of The Fisherman and His Wife—will violate every expectation.

    See also:
    Femme Fatale.

  • Nayra.Hassan

    فاُنْظُرْ بِعَقْلِكَ إنَّ العيَنَ كاذِبَةٌ؛واسْمَعْ بِقَلبِكَ إنّ السّمْعَ خوّانُ

    Screenshot-20200209-003903
    .. عن اعمار ضائعة و حيوات  تهدر هباء
    عن الرضا و درجاته و السعادة و أسبابها
    عن العقل و قلته و النزاهة و مسمياتها
    عن المظاهر الكاذبة و الصدق المؤجل
    عن قرارات تدمرحياتك و لحظات سهو تغدرك
    عن حقائق تًكتشف بعد فوات الأوان؛ فثير الرعب لا الرضا

    ا” ليس هناك عار في الدنيا يفوق أن تكون فقيرا وسط نساء غنيات"؟!! ا
    ماتيلدا امرأة بسيطة تقنع نفسها كذبا انها ارستقراطية.. تطلعاتها تفسد حياتها..و كمعظم البشر الحمقى لا تدرك قيمة ما لديها الا بعد فقدانه
    كانت جميلة و شابة؛ لديها زوج محب و بيت متوسط  أنيق و خادمة صغيرة و دخل منتظم يكفيهم.. َو يرغب زوجها في اسعادها بحضور حفلة رسمية.. فهل ستسعد؟

    Screenshot-20200209-003952

    القصة فقدت نجمات بسبب اني توقعتها كلها منذ البداية و دي موباسان مشهور بالنهايات الساخرة المريرة ..ربما في نهاية القرن ١٩ كانت مدهشة
    و لكنى أراها" كليشيه "تنعت النساء بالغباء و التفاهة و السطحية و المظهرية.. بينما هي صفات مشتركة بين الجنسين
    و القصة التي تقرر كثيرا في المدارس. . ستجدها مسموعة و ستجدها هنا ⬇️ كاملة بترجمة مبسطة في السبويلر المخفي

  • Cecily

    Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose

    If all the wannabe celebs on Instagram,
    Love Island, and their ilk make you despair at the corrosive effect of consumerism and the vacuous obsession with looking and dressing perfectly (or, with Love Island, perhaps that should be undressing), you can be cheered or depressed by the fact that 134 years ago, de Maupassant had similar concerns.

    With women there is neither caste nor rank; and beauty, grace, and charm act instead of family and birth.
    The phrasing is from 1888, but I guess there’s still a lot of truth in it.

    Self-improvement is good; social-climbing perhaps less so. This tragi-comic morality tale demonstrates the dangers of envy and pretence. Better to live in the moment and enjoy what you have, even while hoping and working towards higher things.


    Image: A woman wearing a diamond necklace (
    Source)

    How it starts

    She was one of those pretty and charming girls who are sometimes, as if by a mistake of destiny, born in a family of clerks.
    Awareness of that sours her life. “She let herself be married” to a clerk but is consumed with resentment at the fine things she doesn’t have and feels she deserves.
    She was as unhappy as though she had really fallen from her proper station.
    She hates the ordinary things around her and dreams of Oriental tapestries, shining silverware, and:
    Strange birds flying in a fairy forest… and of the whispered gallantries which you listen to with a sphinx-like smile while you are eating the pink flesh of a trout or the wings of a quail.

    Her husband triumphantly acquires an invitation to a reception that few clerks can go to, an opportunity to advance their social connections. But what shall she wear?
    There's nothing more humiliating than to look poor among other women who are rich.
    A solution is found and it's a glorious evening:
    Mme Loisel made a great success... She danced with intoxication, with passion, made drunk by pleasure, forgetting all, in the triumph of her beauty in the glory of her success in a sort of cloud of happiness.

    Cinderella came to mind. There is a tragic twist, but not quite that: this is realism, not a fairytale. Mme Loisel reflects how different things could have been, but rather than being bitter, she seems to become a better person. The final twist turns the knife, even as it raises a smile in the reader.

    See also

    • I read this immediately after Henry James’ The Real Thing (see my review
    HERE), which tackles similar themes in a rather different way. In both, those whose social position is lower than they want are the ones who struggle to juggle authenticity and pride. Those whose social position is secure can weather storms of finance more easily.

    • Henry James wrote a contrasting version of the story a decade later,
    Paste.

    Short story club

    I read this as one of the stories in
    The Art of the Short Story, by Dana Gioia, from which I'm aiming to read one story a week with
    The Short Story Club, starting 2 May 2022.

    You can read this story
    here.

    You can join the group
    here.

  • Jon Nakapalau

    Do we own things or do they own us? My favorite short story...a life changing lesson. Maupassant is a master of 'quick immersion' - he is able to place you in his stories so quickly that you feel as if you have been 'there' for a long time. I have never read an author who has been able to do this as skillfully as he can. A real undercurrent of 'dharmic chains' here - the chains we place upon ourselves when we pursue materialism to the exclusion of all other considerations.

  • Nilguen

    I LOVE this short story that is packed with so much wisdom and insight whilst finishing up with a strong morale.

    Mathilde Loisel, our main protagonist longs for living the high-life. She wallows in self-pity, is oversensitive and a strenuous wife to her husband.

    One day, as her husband joyously tells her about the invite to a ball in the palace of the ministry, expecting his wife to get excited about it, Mathilde sinks even deeper in self-pity. After all, she´s got nothing to wear to the ball, she says.

    Anyway, her husband gives her money to buy a dress and impatiently advises her to lend some jewelry from her close friend Madame Forestier, who is well heeled.

    No sooner said than done, Mathilde accompanies her husband to the ball in her brand-new dress and the diamond necklace she borrowed from Madame Forestier. Now she´s having the time of her life! She´s wrapped in a cloud of happiness with all the attention she gets…until she loses the precious necklace.

    That’s when their phase of desperation starts: Husband and wife cannot find the necklace anywhere and feel forced to replace it with much chagrin and struggle. It takes them TEN years to pay off the necklace whilst they downsize their lifestyle to the bare minimum.

    Gone is the beauty of Mathilde as she is taught the real hardship of life.

    The short story finishes with Mathilde running into Madame Forestier when taking a walk in Champs-Élysées. During their conversation Madame Forestier reveals to her that the necklace she had lent to her ten years ago...was FAKE and cost a friction of the replacement that Mathilde returned!!!

    Poor Mathilde!

    This story draws parallels to Madame Bovary, to Great Gatsby and all wanna-be´s around us who are constantly dissatisfied with what they have and long for a high-life with the rich. Though the rich can even afford to wear fakes and pretend like it is the real deal.

    The story signals a wake up call to appreciate what we got in life. Nothing is wrong with having ambitions, but Guy de Maupassant reminds us that greediness and envy is atrocious.

    LOVE this short story. Easy 5 stars. 🤗🎊🎉👏

    #ShortStoryClub

    IG: nilguen_reads

  • Sheri

    The foolishness of youth gives way to a hard and bitter truth born of regret. If only we could rewind time... An excellent tale with several solid moral lessons!

  • Lizzy

    I loved this story, simply told with its allegorical irony. That is
    Guy de Maupassant's style, after all. There are two major themes behind
    The Necklace: one, the difference between appearances and true value, or as Oscar Wilde remarked in The Portrait of Dorian Gray: “Nowadays people know the price of everything, and the value of nothing”; second, and perhaps most important, the idea that true happiness cannot be reached through fleeting moments: borrowing Wordsworth’s words from Ode to Immortality, it was the “hour of splendor in the grass, the glory of the flower” that soon perishes.

  • Bob (aka Bobby Lee)

    The Necklace by Guy de Maupassant. First published 1884.

    GR Blurb -
    After devoting their energies and income for ten years to replacing a borrowed diamond necklace which they have lost, a woman and her husband learn the irony of their efforts.

    My brief thoughts -
    An engaging short story and must read for everyone. For me, it perfectly illustrated how a narcissistic individual, Mathilde, can deleteriously impact what was meant to be a loving and supportive relationship for a couple. Mathilde has grandiose aspirations despite her status as a nonelite woman married to a nonelite man. She loathes her commoner status and "petty clerk" husband. She aspires to wealth and fame and all the trappings of the aristocracy. My heart went out to her husband - an unappreciated hard-working soul who does everything he can to try and please his wife - but his efforts go unrecognized and are met with disdain and contempt.

    A classic short story and as previously stated a must read by all. My thanks to Meghna, whose splendid review for this book made it a must read for me.

  • AiK

    На мой взгляд, это очень мужской рассказ. Мужской в том смысле, что после его прочтения большинство мужчин воскликнут хотя бы мысленно: «Я же говорил, что твои новые платья (или что-то другое из женского гардероба) до добра не доведут» или «Не в платьях счастье, я тебя люблю и такую». Да, судьба сыграла злую шутку с главной героиней и превратила эту красавицу в заурядную женщину среднего возраста в рабочей одежде и с рабочими руками. Виновата ли она, что родилась женщиной, с ее инстинктом нравится, сводить с ума, очаровывать? Да, многие современные женщины не стремятся выглядеть как куколки, но стремление превосходить всех может проявляться в карьерных достижениях или подобном. Злая шутка и в том, что вместо бижутерии, они вручили хозяйке ожерелье с настоящими бриллиантами в 72 раза, превосходившее стоимость утерянного. Каково было узнать, что все их жертвы оказались напрасны. Я сочувствую главной героине, она не заслуживает мужского злорадства. Конечно, не стоило так стремиться ослепить всех на балу своим великолепием, особенно если средства не позволяют, и ее муж был в общем-то прав, предложив украсить наряд свежими цветами. Но у нее было так мало радостей, так мало событий, когда можно выйти в общество и показать себя. Как говорится, накопилось…

  • Jesús De la Jara

    "Era una de esas bonitas y encantadoras muchachas que nacen, como por un error del destino, en una familia de empleados"

    Este cuento corto creo sirve mejor como una sátira social, de la importancia que muchas personas buscan en el ambiente donde se desenvuelven. Nos da una idea de esa gran diferencia que existía quizás aún más pronunciada durante la época del segundo imperio francés entre las personas "bien nacidas" y las de condición económica media o trabajadora. Todavía era muy diferente el dinero proveniente de la nobleza o del trabajo en puestos de empleos del estado, oficinistas, comerciantes, Etc. No era lo mismo un rico noble que un rico hecho con su propio esfuerzo. En este cuento la Sra. Loisel a pesar de haber nacido muy hermosa tiene que conformarse con una vida "mediana" al lado de un burgués y el cuento empieza cuando por fin de mucho tiempo de un matrimonio desprovisto de encantos sociales para ella tiene la oportunidad de ir a una gran recepción. Es una excusa más bien para satirizar el cuidado que dan ambos burgueses a la humillación que podría venir por las malas lenguas en torno al asunto del collar. Al final, parece que ese extremo de precaución les pasó factura.

  • Kathryn in FL

    I just saw this story in a GR friend's recent reads.

    Honestly, I've thought about this book many times in life! I read it in my early teens so lets just say it had a profound message that has stayed with me nearly all of my life. Its telling is unwrapped like a present. The power of the ending is haunting. It's message, timeless.

    I thought this was an O. Henry story because of the manner it was written and because of the "moral" of the story.

  • Laysee

    ‘How little a thing is needed for us to be lost or to be saved!’

    The Necklace is the first literary work I have read by Guy de Maupassant, a 19th century French writer famed for the short story form. It is a potent tale about the price to be paid to satisfy the lure of riches and the vanity of human wishes.

    Mathilde Loisel is a beautiful woman from a humble background married to a lowly clerk employed in public service. She feels that she deserves a better life: a house she can be proud of, gleaming silverware, fine clothes and jewelry, social opportunities, adoring glances and admiration. She is ashamed of her poverty even though she can afford a servant to help with household chores. One day, her husband returns home with triumphant news of a coveted invitation to the Palace. But how will Mathilde present herself to the important and illustrious company that will grace the occasion? The humiliation of not having the right dress and accessories for a grand function gnaws at her until a solution is found.

    And thus unfolds a story of The Necklace that is gorgeously heartbreaking.

    Thank you, Cecily, for directing me to this story. It can be read here:
    The Necklace

  • Mohsin Maqbool

    description
    A caricature of Guy de Maupassant.

    Guy de Maupassant is one of the best writers of short stories. He is admired by book-lovers all over the world. Once you have read a story of his, you will be hooked for life.
    A woman is invited to a ballroom party. In fact, her husband, a clerk, has gone through great trouble to get the invitation card as only the rich and the famous have been invited.
    However, the woman is not happy. On being asked as to why she felt unhappy, she replies that she has no dress to wear on the occasion. Her husband tells her that he had saved 4000 francs to buy a hunting rifle. But he sacrifices for her sake and gives her the money, asking her to buy herself the dress that she liked best. He advises her to get a rose necklace which she could buy for a few francs. However, she wants to wear something expensive around her neck with such a beautiful dress. When her husband tells her that she could borrow one from a close friend, she is delighted and does exactly that. Soon she returns with a diamond necklace.

    description
    ...

    description
    A sketch of ballroom dancing along with an extract from "The Necklace".

    On the day of the ballroom party, she looks ravishing and becomes the cynosure of all eyes. All the men want to dance with her. She feels ecstatic. Time flies away and it is time to return home. The couple walks some distance to catch a cab.
    On reaching home, the wife discovers that the necklace is missing; it has been lost somewhere.
    How the missing necklace changes the couple's life is the gist of the story.
    The short story teaches us a moral that we should be satisfied with whatever we have and not be greedy to attain something which is out of our reach.
    Desires need to be controlled at times. If you don't, it might end up ruining your entire life.

    description
    An unwanted desire can fill your life with misery, turning you old at jet-speed.

  • Piyangie

    The Necklace is a good short story that delivers a powerful message. With his crisp and ironic writing, Maupassant intimates the consequences of a woman's pride and vanity.

    Mathilde's pride and vanity, unacceptance of her station in life, and aspiring to do things outside their means results in painful consequences for both her and her husband. Mathilde dreams to live the life of a wealthy woman. She is unhappy with her bourgeois life with her clerk husband. For one day, it becomes possible to live her dream. But that day also becomes the beginning of a nightmare.

    The irony behind Mathilde's story is extremely interesting. She couldn't be happy and content with her life before her fall. When she actually came to know the misery of being deprived of the necessities, she bore them with strength and courage. If only she had the will to be content with her situation, had exercised prudence to economize and improve their financial status, and had shown the same strength and courage to rise in life, as she did after her misfortune, she would have perhaps risen to some level of wealth to which she so yearned. But she lost all that opportunity through her haughty pride and vanity, the two gifts she received from her beauty.

    I enjoyed this short story by Maupassant. I've now read two short stories and one novel by the author. And I agree with the majority opinion that Guy de Maupassant is at his best in his short stories.

  • Steven Godin

    de Maupassant manages to bring a flavor to his stories that are close to unforgettable. He writes about ordinary people, but he paints their lives in colors that are rich with adultery, marriage, prostitution, murder, and war. During his lifetime, he created nearly 300 stories, and in my opinion a far greater writer of the short story than the novel. "The Necklace" one of his most famous works, focuses on Mme. Mathilde Loisel - a woman seemingly "fated" to her status in life. "She was one of those pretty and elegant girls who are sometimes as if by a mistake of destiny, born in a family of clerks." Instead of accepting her position she feels cheated in life. She is selfish and self-involved, tortured and angry that she can't purchase the jewels and clothing that she desires. Maupassant writes, "She suffered ceaselessly, feeling herself born for all the delicacies and all the luxuries." this amounts to a moralistic fable in some ways, She wants to be someone and something that she is not.

    Wishing to appear wealthy to the other women at a ball, she borrowed a diamond necklace from a wealthy friend, after having a great time, she descends into poverty. I don't want to give anything else away here, but will add the ending hit me like a tom of bricks, the final line is read and the world of that story comes crashing down around us.

    A classic short-story jewel in the crown.

  • Carol

    Be careful what you wish for.....

    In this predictable short story classic, only misery for Madame Loisel. No clothes, no jewels, no one to admire her....nothing but a ho-hum lowly marriage....until the ministry ball, that is, with the loan of THE NECKLACE.

    Harder times follow, sorrow and shock with hard lesson learned.

    First published 1884.

  • Janete on hiatus due health issues

    A remarkable short story! I loved it!

    Synopis: "Invited to a ball at the Ministry of Public Instruction where her husband works, Mathilde is in despair about how to look the part. She manages to persuade her husband to give her 400 francs for a new dress. But she also would like some jewellery to complete the outfit. Although their budget cannot stretch to this, Mathilde is able to borrow a diamond necklace from an old schoolfriend who is wealthy. But while she dazzles everyone at the ball, disaster is waiting in the wings..."

  • Razan

    3.5 /5 stars
    lets just say that i would've liked it more if i it wasn't for a literary reading class :)
    With that being said, it wasn't the best short story that I've read but it still is an enjoyable read, although the characters were stupid and i hated all of them very much, but the concept of the book saved it and i appreciate that.

  • Kathleen

    “Pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall. Better to be lowly in spirit along with the oppressed than to share plunder with the proud.” Proverbs 16:18-19

    A short, simple morality tale with an ironic ending that leaves you standing in the character’s shoes.

    I’d like to try some of de Maupassant’s longer works. This one just made me think of other versions of this message that I liked better (perhaps because there’s more to them), like
    Madame Bovary or
    The Gift of the Magi.

    Still, it’s an excellent take on a timeless lesson, one I learned first from Fractured Fairy Tales.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nn4QF...

  • Sara

    Guy de Maupassant was a master of irony and this is one of his most famous short stories. I remembered it from high school, but it was worth revisiting.

    I wonder how often we punish ourselves in life because we envy others, try to keep up with the Joneses, or focus on the material world too much.

  • Jessaka

    A Stupid Superficial Woman Goes to the Ball

    I read this book by accident as it was part of a mystery series, that is, a book with a lot of books in it, and after listening to it on Audible I couldn’t figure out why it was a mystery.

    But I will say this: I normally don’t read mysteries, nor do I read short stories. Just never liked “who done its” if they have a list of characters and read like Agatha Christie or Ngaio Marsh, whose books I have only read one of each. The Marsh book was first read by my friend Julie when we were in Mexico. She found it in our hotel room. She gave it to me to read. Said it was good. I looked at the list of characters, told her who the murdered was, and she gave me a strange look. I read the book and was right.


    Well, this story was captivating. Who knows I may try other short stories, at least by him, but maybe not because I have 2,000 plus books on my kindle, not to say how many I own as paperback and hardback, and I am sure that I will not be alive to finish them all, mainly because I keep getting new books. What can I say? I can say this: Old people don’t need this many books.

    This story was about a woman who wanted to be wealthy; she wanted rich friends. She also had a dislike for her surroundings, that is, if things didn’t look perfect. I understood the perfect. I hate clutter, and I consider myself a decorator in the way of Country Living Magazine, but my style is not English Country, nothing fancy. I have a husband that finds clutter okay. I gave up. He has his own cluttered corner, a room with a desk and my lovely back porch with wicker furniture also has room for his tools. Easier to get to than to walk out to his shop.

    But now this is where this woman and I part ways. Her husband got tickets to go to a ball, one with the wealthy people. Maybe only the rich go to balls. He was a clerk. I think she married beneath what she desired, but she probably had no choice. Anyway, she so wanted to go to the ball, but she needed a dress, an expensive one. Geesh! He gave her the money for it, the money he was saving for a gun to go hunting with a friend. Nice guy who deserved a better wife, because she gladly took the money.

    I hate parties. I would even hate to give one. I dated a few doctors and lawyers while in college, and I finally realized that these men would expect me to have parties. Plus, the ones I dated were boring. I had one doctor buy me a dress to go to one of his parties. We were going to marry, so it was okay. Stupid me. I hated the party. We broke up soon after, but for other reasons. That was good. But I will say one thing. I did like the food. My friends and I crashed a party in Berkeley, just said that we were friends of Mary. Everyone knows a Mary. We ate the food and left. They may have danced and socialized. I can’t tell you why I hate parties because I am social. Maybe it is that I hate going out at night, always have. Maybe it is because they dance all night or the talk is boring. That’s it. The conversations are boring. I hate small talk. Give me a party with writers and intellectuals, and it would be fun even if I couldn’t really participate that well. I can listen and eat.

    So this stupid woman goes to the party, but not before she borrows a diamond necklace. Who in their right mind would borrow an expensive necklace? My jewelry is all hippie jewelry or some hippied type that I bought at a store. Why would anyone wear anything different? And I would never let anyone borrow any of it. You cannot replace Telegraph Avenue jewelry from Berkeley. (For those that don’t know. Street artists sold their jewelry on Telegraph Avenue.)

    And who wants an expensive dress? I never got over my hippie days. Never got over my growing years of wearing jeans and cowboy boots. My dresses are tie dyed and loose, and I seldom wear them. But now if you are going to say that I just fear rich people, well, not true. I have some wealthy friends, but some are earthy. One of my friends was married to a rich doctor, divorced, and her daughter married a Rockefeller, but she wears khakis. Some of my somewhat wealthy friends dress up, but they don’t take me places.

    I can’t say more about this book because if I did it would give it away. And I can’t analyze it anymore than I have because to do so I would have to read up on other critiques, which I am not into doing. I once took a course in college where they analyzed a book. It took the joy out of reading. I’ll make what I want out of a book.













  • Kamal

    عن فرح غايب عن قلب ذايب وعن حبايب كانوا هنا
    عن بكرة طالع من المواجع عن عمر ضايع بحكي أنا

    عن الرضا الذى يزين الحياة وينيرها
    وعن السخط وحب الظهور وحب التزين الذى يحول الحياة إلى ماساة
    مأساة عاشها الزوجين بعد أن فقدت الزوجة الحلية التى استعارتها من صديقتها الحميمة
    الحلية التى فقدتها الزوجة فى حفل وزارة زوجها وبين حشد كبير من نساء ورجال المجتمع الأغنياء الأثرياء
    هنا الفقر ليس فقر المال ولكن عدم الرضا وفقر النفس الذى يدفع للجنون
    ليه كل ما تمشي في سكة يا قلبي يكون نهايتها طريق مسدود
    والأيام على ورقة حلمك تختم ختم طلب مرفوض

    لا أود حرق القصة القصيرة اللطيفة ولكن الأحداث على الرغم من سرعتها وبساطتها إلا أنها كانت مؤثرة وموجعة