The Necklace: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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"The Necklace" is an 1884 short story by [[Guy De Maupassant (Creator)|Guy De Maupassant]].
"The Necklace" is an 1884 short story by [[Guy de Maupassant]].


A young, lower middle class couple borrows some nice clothes and jewelry from an upper class friend to wear to a party. During the course of the party, the lady loses a diamond necklace. Hiding the truth, the two sell their house and all their possessions and work for the next twenty years to pay the friend back, only to be told at the end it was costume jewelry, and worth only a couple of dollars at the most.
A young, lower middle class couple borrows some nice clothes and jewelry from an upper class friend to wear to a party. During the course of the party, the lady loses a diamond necklace. Hiding the truth, the two sell their house and all their possessions and work for the next twenty years to pay the friend back, only to be told at the end it was costume jewelry, and worth only a couple of dollars at the most.
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* [[Karmic Twist Ending]]
* [[Karmic Twist Ending]]
* [[Mock Millionaire]]
* [[Mock Millionaire]]
* [[Never Lend to A Friend]]
* [[Never Lend to a Friend]]
* [[No Doubt the Years Have Changed Me]]: When the lady meets her friend again at the end of the story, the friend doesn't recognise her at first because of all she's gone through to pay off the necklace.
* [[No Doubt the Years Have Changed Me]]: When the lady meets her friend again at the end of the story, the friend doesn't recognise her at first because of all she's gone through to pay off the necklace.
* [[Shaggy Dog Story]]: This story's version of the trope is so strong, it nearly crosses over to [[Shoot the Shaggy Dog]] territory (if the reader wasn't laughing from the story's cruel irony). What saves it from that extreme is that the situation could have been ''very'' easily avoided, had the couple admitted that they lost the necklace in the first place.
* [[Shaggy Dog Story]]: This story's version of the trope is so strong, it nearly crosses over to [[Shoot the Shaggy Dog]] territory (if the reader wasn't laughing from the story's cruel irony). What saves it from that extreme is that the situation could have been ''very'' easily avoided, had the couple admitted that they lost the necklace in the first place.
* [[Storm in A Teacup]]: Played for drama.
* [[Storm in a Teacup]]: Played for drama.


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 19:56, 9 April 2014

"The Necklace" is an 1884 short story by Guy de Maupassant.

A young, lower middle class couple borrows some nice clothes and jewelry from an upper class friend to wear to a party. During the course of the party, the lady loses a diamond necklace. Hiding the truth, the two sell their house and all their possessions and work for the next twenty years to pay the friend back, only to be told at the end it was costume jewelry, and worth only a couple of dollars at the most.


Tropes used by the story: