The Necklace by Guy de Maupassant
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SHE was one of those pretty and charming girls, born by a
blunder of destiny in a family of employees. She had no dowry, no expectations,
no means of being known, understood, loved, married by a man rich and
distinguished; and she let them make a match for her with a little clerk in the
Department of Education.
She was simple since
she could not be adorned; but she was unhappy as though kept out of her own
class; for women have no caste and no descent, their beauty, their grace, and
their charm serving them instead of birth and fortune. Their native keenness, their
instinctive elegance, their flexibility of mind, are their only hierarchy; and
these make the daughters of the people the equals of the most lofty dames.
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. All these things, which another woman of her caste
would not even have noticed, tortured her and made her indignant. The sight of
the little girl from Brittany who did her humble housework awoke in her
desolated regrets and distracted dreams. She let her mind dwell on the quiet
vestibules, hung with Oriental tapestries, lighted by tall lamps of bronze, and
on the two tall footmen in knee breeches who dozed in the large armchairs, made
drowsy by the heat of the furnace. She let her mind dwell on the large parlors,
decked with old silk, with their delicate furniture, supporting precious
bric-a-brac, and on the coquettish little rooms, perfumed, prepared for the
five o’clock chat with the most intimate friends, men well known and sought
after, whose attentions all women envied and desired.
When she sat down to
dine, before a tablecloth three days old, in front of her husband, who lifted
the cover of the tureen, declaring with an air of satisfaction, “Ah, the good
pot-au-feu. I don’t know anything better than that,” she was thinking of
delicate repasts, with glittering silver, with tapestries peopling the walls
with ancient figures and with strange birds in a fairy-like forest; she was
thinking of exquisite dishes, served in marvelous platters, of compliment
whispered and heard with a sphinx-like smile, while she was eating the rosy
flesh of a trout or the wings of a quail.
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.
She had a rich
friend, a comrade of her convent days, whom she did not want to go and see any
more, so much did she suffer as she came away. And she wept all day long, from
chagrin, from regret, from despair, and from distress.
But one evening her husband came in with a proud air,
holding in his hand a large envelope.
“There,” said he, “there’s
something for you.”
She quickly tore the
paper and took out of it a printed card which bore these words:—
“The Minister of
Education and Mme. Georges Rampouneau beg M. and Mme. Loisel to do them the
honor to pass the evening with them at the palace of the Ministry, on Monday,
January 18.”
Instead of being
delighted, as her husband hoped, she threw the invitation on the table with
annoyance, murmuring—
“What do you want me
to do with that?”
“But, my dear, I
thought you would be pleased. You never go out, and here’s a chance, a fine
one. I had the hardest work to get it. Everybody is after them; they are
greatly sought for and not many are given to the clerks. You will see there all
the official world.”
She looked at him
with an irritated eye and she declared with impatience:—
“What do you want me
to put on my back to go there?”
He had not thought
of that; he hesitated:—
“But the dress in
which you go to the theater. That looks very well to me—”
He shut up,
astonished and distracted at seeing that his wife was weeping. Two big tears
were descending slowly from the corners of the eyes to the corners of the
mouth. He stuttered:—
What’s the matter?
What’s the matter?”
But by a violent
effort she had conquered her trouble, and she replied in a calm voice as she
wiped her damp cheeks:—
“Nothing. Only I
have no clothes, and in consequence I cannot go to this party. Give your card
to some colleague whose wife has a better outfit than I.”
He was disconsolate.
He began again:—
“See here, Mathilde,
how much would this cost, a proper dress, which would do on other occasions;
something very simple?”
She reflected a few
seconds, going over her calculations, and thinking also of the sum which she
might ask without meeting an immediate refusal and a frightened exclamation
from the frugal clerk.
“At last, she
answered hesitatingly:—
“I don’t know
exactly, but it seems to me that with four hundred francs I might do it.”
He grew a little
pale, for he was reserving just that sum to buy a gun and treat himself to a
little shooting, the next summer, on the plain of Nanterre, with some friends
who used to shoot larks there on Sundays.
But he said:—
“All right. I will
give you four hundred francs. But take care to have a pretty dress.”
The day of the party drew near, and Mme. Loisel seemed sad,
restless, anxious. Yet her dress was ready. One evening her husband said to
her:—
“What’s the matter?
Come, now, you have been quite queer these last three days.”
And she answered:
“It annoys me not to
have a jewel, not a single stone, to put on. I shall look like distress. I
would almost rather not go to this party.”
He answered:
“You will wear some
natural flowers. They are very stylish this time of the year. For ten francs
you will have two or three magnificent roses.”
But she was not convinced.
“No; there’s nothing
more humiliating than to look poor among a lot of rich women.”
But her husband
cried:
“What a goose you
are! Go find your friend, Mme. Forester, and ask her to lend you some jewelry.
You know her well enough to do that.”
She gave a cry of
joy:
“That’s true. I had
not thought of it.”
The next day she
went to her friend’s and told her about her distress.
Mme. Forester went
to her mirrored wardrobe, took out a large casket, brought it, opened it, and
said to Mme. Loisel:
“Choose, my dear.”
She saw at first
bracelets, then a necklace of pearls, then a Venetian cross of gold set with
precious stones of an admirable workmanship. She tried on the ornaments before
the glass, hesitated, and could not decide to take them off and to give them
up. She kept on asking:
“You haven’t
anything else?”
“Yes, yes. Look. I
do not know what will happen to please you.”
All at once she
discovered, in a box of black satin, a superb necklace of diamonds, and her
heart began to beat with boundless desire. Her hands trembled in taking it up.
She fastened it round her throat, on her high dress, and remained in ecstasy
before herself.
Then, she asked, hesitating,
full of anxiety:
“Can you lend me
this, only this?”
“Yes, yes, certainly.”
She sprang to her
friend’s neck, kissed her with ardor, and then escaped with her treasure.
The day of the party arrived. Mme. Loisel was a success. She
was the prettiest of them all, elegant, gracious, smiling, and mad with joy.
All the men were looking at her, inquiring her name, asking to be introduced.
All the attaches of the Cabinet wanted to dance with her. The Minister took
notice of her.
She danced with
delight, with passion, intoxicated with pleasure, thinking of nothing, in the
triumph of her beauty, in the glory of her success, in a sort of cloud of happiness
made up of all these tributes, of all the admirations, of all these awakened
desires, of this victory so complete and so sweet to a woman’s heart.
She went away about
four in the morning. Since midnight—her husband has been dozing in a little anteroom
with three other men whose wives were having a good time.
He threw over her
shoulders the wraps he had brought to go home in, modest garments of every-day
life, the poverty of which was out of keeping with the elegance of the ball
dress. She felt this, and wanted to fly so as not to be noticed by the other
women, who were wrapping themselves up in rich furs.
Loisel kept her
back—
“Wait a minute; you
will catch cold outside; I’ll call a cab.”
But she did not
listen to him, and went downstairs rapidly. When they were in the street, they
could not find a carriage, and they set out in search of one, hailing the
drivers whom they saw passing in the distance.
They went down
toward the Seine, disgusted, shivering.
Finally, they found on the Quai one of
those old night-hawk cabs which one sees in Paris only after night has fallen,
as though they are ashamed of their misery in the daytime.
It brought them to
their door, rue des Martyrs; and they went up their own stairs sadly. For her
it was finished. And he was thinking that he would have to be at the Ministry
at ten o’clock.
She took off the
wraps with which she had covered her shoulders, before the mirror, so as to see
herself once more in her glory. But suddenly she gave a cry. She no longer had
the necklace around her throat!
Her husband, half
undressed already, asked
“What is the matter
with you?”
She turned to him,
terror-stricken:
“I—I—I have not Mme.
Forester’s diamond necklace!”
He jumped up,
frightened
“What? How? It is
not possible!”
And they searched in
the folds of the dress, in the folds of the wrap, in the pockets, everywhere.
They did not find it.
He asked:
“Are you sure you
still had it when you left the ball?”
“Yes, I touched it
in the vestibule of the Ministry.”
“But if you had lost
it in the street, we should have heard it fall. It must be in the cab.”
“Yes. That is
probable. Did you take the number?”
“No. And you—you did
not even look at it?”
“No.”
They gazed at each
other, crushed. At last Loisel dressed himself again.
“I’m going,” he
said, “back the whole distance we came on foot, to see if I cannot find it.”
And he went out. She
stayed there, in her ball dress, without strength to go to bed, overwhelmed, on
a chair, without a fire, without a thought.
Her husband came
back about seven o’clock. He had found nothing.
Then he went to
police headquarters, to the newspapers to offer a reward, to the cab company;
he did everything, in fact, that a trace of hope could urge him to.
She waited all day,
in the same dazed state in face of this horrible disaster.
Loisel came back in
the evening, with his face worn and white; he had discovered nothing.
“You must write to
your friend,” he said, “that you have broken the clasp of her necklace and that
you are having it repaired. That will give us time to turn around.”
She wrote as he dictated.
At the end of a week they had lost all hope. And Loisel, aged
by five years, declared:
“We must see how we
can replace those jewels.”
The next day they
took the case which had held them to the jeweler whose name was in the cover.
He consulted his books.
“It was not I,
madam, who sold this necklace. I only supplied the case.”
Then they went from
jeweler to jeweler, looking for a necklace like the other, consulting their
memory,—sick both of them with grief and anxiety.
In a shop in the
Palais Royal, they found a diamond necklace that seemed to them absolutely like
the one they were seeking. It was priced forty thousand francs. They could have
it for thirty-six.
They begged the
jeweler not to sell it for three days. And they made a bargain that he should
take it back for thirty-four thousand, if the first was found before the end of
February.
Loisel possessed
eighteen thousand francs which his father had left him. He had to borrow the
remainder.
He borrowed, asking
a thousand francs from one, five hundred from another, five here, three louis
there. He gave promissory notes, made ruinous agreements, dealt with usurers,
with all kinds of lenders. He compromised the end of his life, risked his
signature without even knowing whether it could be honored; and, frightened by
all the anguish of the future, by the black misery which was about to settle
down on him, by the perspective of all sorts of physical deprivations and of
all sorts of moral tortures, he went to buy the new diamond necklace, laying
down on the jeweler’s counter thirty-six thousand francs.
When Mme. Loisel
took back the necklace to Mme. Forester, the latter said, with an irritated
air:
“You ought to have
brought it back sooner, for I might have needed it.”
She did not open the
case, which her friend had been fearing. If she had noticed the substitution,
what would she have thought? What would she have said? Might she not have been
taken for a thief?
Mme. Loisel learned the horrible life of the needy. She made
the best of it, moreover, frankly, heroically. The frightful debt must be paid.
She would pay it. They dismissed the servant; they changed their rooms; they took
an attic under the roof.
She learned the
rough work of the household, the odious labors of the kitchen. She washed the
dishes, wearing out her pink nails on the greasy pots and the bottoms of the
pans. She washed the dirty linen, the shirts and the towels, which she dried on
a rope; she carried down the garbage to the street every morning, and she
carried up the water, pausing for breath on every floor. And, dressed like a
woman of the people, she went to the fruiterer, the grocer, the butcher, a
basket on her arm, bargaining, insulted, fighting for her wretched money, sou
by sou.
Every month they had
to pay notes, to renew others to gain time.
The husband worked
in the evening keeping up the books of a shopkeeper, and at night often he did
copying at five sous the page.
And this life lasted
ten years.
At the end of ten
years they had paid everything back, everything, with the rates of usury and
all the accumulation of heaped-up interest.
Mme. Loisel seemed
aged now. She had become the robust woman, hard and rough, of a poor household.
Badly combed, with her skirts awry and her hands red, her voice was loud, and
she washed the floor with splashing water.
But sometimes, when
her husband was at the office, she sat down by the window and she thought of
that evening long ago, of that ball, where she had been so beautiful and so
admired.
What would have
happened if she had not lost that necklace? Who knows? Who knows? How singular
life is, how changeable! What a little thing it takes to save you or to lose
you.
Then, one Sunday, as
she was taking a turn in the Champs Elysées, as a recreation after the labors
of the week, she perceived suddenly a woman walking with a child. It was Mme.
Forester, still young, still beautiful, still seductive.
Mme. Loisel felt
moved. Should she speak to her? Yes, certainly. And now that she had paid up,
she would tell her all. Why not?
She drew near.
“Good morning,
Jeanne.”
The other did not
recognize her, astonished to be hailed thus familiarly by this woman of the
people. She hesitated—
“But—madam—I don’t
know—are you not making a mistake?”
“No. I am Mathilde
Loisel.”
Her friend gave a
cry—
“Oh!—My poor Mathilde,
how you are changed.”
“Yes, I have had
hard days since I saw you, and many troubles,—and that because of you.”
“Of me?—How so?”
“You remember that
diamond necklace that you lent me to go to the ball at the Ministry?”
“Yes. And then?”
“Well, I lost it.”
“How can that
be?—since you brought it back to me?”
“I brought you back
another just like it. And now for ten years we have been paying for it. You
will understand that it was not easy for us, who had nothing. At last, it is done,
and I am mighty glad.”
Mme. Forester had guessed.
“You say that you
bought a diamond necklace to replace mine?”
“Yes. You did not
notice it, even, did you? They were exactly alike?”
And she smiled with
proud and naïve joy.
Mme. Forester, much
moved, took her by both hands:
“Oh, my poor
Mathilde. But mine were false. At most they were worth five hundred francs!”
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