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The Necklace Research Paper

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On August 31, 1997, The beautiful Princess Diana died from a tragic car accident in Paris, France. The loss was devastating to many around the world and millions of flowers were laid before Buckingham Palace. Her life had changed how royalty was viewed and how media and paparazzi worked, especially in the UK, and that change only sped up after the accident. And just like how society went through a change after Princess Diana's death, Mme. Mathilde Loisel of Guy de Maupassant's The Necklace underwent the change after the death of her current lifestyle. Mme. Loisel had lost a borrowed necklace that had been lent to her for a ball. She and her husband were able to replace it without the owner finding out, but it cost them 10 years of poverty and labor to do so. Mme. Loisel had lost everything, and she came to appreciate what she had, because she didn't have it forever. Mme. Loisel could be described as egotistical, narcissistic, and overall, selfish. "She suffered endlessly, feeling herself born …show more content…

Life for them was terrible. "Madame Loisel came to know the ghastly life of abject poverty." She worked day in and day out, along with her husband, and it took a toll on her. "Madame Loisel looked old now." She had scrubbed away her soft hands when she had to begin washing dishes on her own. Her hair grayed and she could no longer associate with the friends that she used to know. "...She played her part heroically. This fearful debt must be paid off. She would pay it." She did not complain much, probably to the delight of her husband, and she was brave enough to own what had happened. Complaining would have meant that she blamed someone else for her mistake, but she had acknowledged that what happened laid on her shoulders. But she still secretly longed for the glorious night she had spent at the ball, where she had been admired by

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