miércoles, 29 de enero de 2014
Guy de Maupassant The Necklace
Guy de Maupassant
The Necklace
She was one of those pretty and charming girls born, as though fate had blundered over her, into a
family of artisans. She had no marriage portion, no expectations, no means of getting known,
understood, loved, and wedded
by a man of wealth and distinction; and she let herself be married off to
a little clerk in the Ministry of Education. Her tastes were simple because she had never been able to
afford any other, but she was as unhappy as though she had married beneath her;
for women have no
caste or class, their beauty, grace, and charm serving them for birth or family, their natural delicacy,
their instinctive elegance, their nimbleness of wit, are their only mark of rank, and put the slum girl on a
level with the highest
lady in the land.
She suffered endlessly, feeling herself born for every delicacy and luxury. She suffered from the
poorness of her house, from its mean walls, worn chairs, and ugly curtains. All these things, of which
other women of her class would
not even have been aware, tormented and insulted her. The sight of
the little Breton girl who came to do the work in her little house aroused heart
-
broken regrets and
hopeless dreams in her mind. She imagined silent antechambers, heavy with Oriental tapest
ries, lit by
torches in lofty bronze sockets, with two tall footmen in knee
-
breeches sleeping in large arm
-
chairs,
overcome by the heavy warmth of the stove. She imagined vast saloons hung with antique silks,
exquisite pieces of furniture supporting pricel
ess ornaments, and small, charming, perfumed rooms,
created just for little parties of intimate friends, men who were famous and sought after, whose homage
roused every other woman's envious longings.
When she sat down for dinner at the round table c
overed with a three
-
days
-
old cloth, opposite her
husband, who took the cover off the soup
-
tureen, exclaiming delightedly: "Aha! Scotch broth! What
could be better?" she imagined delicate meals, gleaming silver, tapestries peopling the walls with folk of
a
past age and strange birds in faery forests; she imagined delicate food served in marvellous dishes,
murmured gallantries, listened to with an inscrutable smile as one trifled with the rosy flesh of trout or
wings of asparagus chicken.
< 2 >
She ha
d no clothes, no jewels, nothing. And these were the only things she loved; she felt that she
was made for them. She had longed so eagerly to charm, to be desired, to be wildly attractive and
sought after.
She had a rich friend, an old school friend
whom she refused to visit, because she suffered so keenly
when she returned home. She would weep whole days, with grief, regret, despair, and misery.
*
One evening her husband came home with an exultant air, holding a large envelope in his hand.
"H
ere's something for you," he said.
Swiftly she tore the paper and drew out a printed card on which were these words:
"The Minister of Education and Madame Ramponneau request the pleasure of the company of
Monsieur and Madame Loisel at the Minis
try on the evening of Monday, January the 18th."
Instead of being delighted, as her husband hoped, she flung the invitation petulantly across the table,
murmuring:
"What do you want me to do with this?"
"Why, darling, I thought you'd be p
leased. You never go out, and this is a great occasion. I had
tremendous trouble to get it. Every one wants one; it's very select, and very few go to the clerks. You'll
see all the really big people there."
She looked at him out of furious eyes, and said impatiently: "And what do you suppose I am to wear
at such an affair?"
He had not thought about it; he stammered:
"Why, the dress you go to the theatre in. It looks very nice, to me . . ."
He stopped, stupefied and utterly at a loss when he saw that his wife was beginning to cry. Two large
tears ran slowly down from the corners of her eyes towards the corners of her mouth.
< 3 >
"What's the matter with you? What's the matter with
you?" he faltered.
But with a violent effort she overcame her grief and replied in a calm voice, wiping her wet cheeks:
"Nothing. Only I haven't a dress and so I can't go to this party. Give your invitation to some friend of
yours whose wife w
ill be turned out better than I shall."
He was heart
-
broken.
"Look here, Mathilde," he persisted. "What would be the cost of a suitable dress, which you could use
on other occasions as well, something very simple?"
She thought for several
seconds, reckoning up prices and also wondering for how large a sum she
could ask without bringing upon herself an immediate refusal and an exclamation of horror from the
careful
-
minded clerk.
At last she replied with some hesitation:
"I don't
know exactly, but I think I could do it on four hundred francs."
He grew slightly pale, for this was exactly the amount he had been saving for a gun, intending to get a
little shooting next summer on the plain of Nanterre with some friends who went
lark
-
shooting there on
Sundays.
Nevertheless he said: "Very well. I'll give you four hundred francs. But try and get a really nice dress
with the money."
The day of the party drew near, and Madame Loisel
seemed sad, uneasy and anxious. Her dress was
ready, however. One evening her husband said to her:
"What's the matter with you? You've been very odd for the last three days."
"I'm utterly miserable at not having any jewels, not a single stone,
to wear," she replied. "I shall look
absolutely no one. I would almost rather not go to the party."
< 4 >
"Wear flowers," he said. "They're very smart at this time of the year. For ten francs you could get two
or three gorgeous roses."
She w
as not convinced.
"No . . . there's nothing so humiliating as looking poor in the middle of a lot of rich women."
"How stupid you are!" exclaimed her husband. "Go and see Madame Forestier and ask her to lend
you some jewels. You know her quite
well enough for that."
She uttered a cry of delight.
"That's true. I never thought of it."
Next day she went to see her friend and told her her trouble.
Madame Forestier went to her dressing
-
table, took up a large box, brought it to
Madame Loisel,
opened it, and said:
"Choose, my dear."
First she saw some bracelets, then a pearl necklace, then a Venetian cross in gold and gems, of
exquisite workmanship. She tried the effect of the jewels before the mirror, hesitating, una
ble to make
up her mind to leave them, to give them up. She kept on asking:
"Haven't you anything else?"
"Yes. Look for yourself. I don't know what you would like best."
Suddenly she discovered, in a black satin case, a superb diamond necklace; her heart began to beat
covetously. Her hands trembled as she lifted it. She fastened it round her neck, upon her high dress, and
remained in ecstasy at sight of herself.
Then, with hesitation, she asked in anguish:
"Could you lend me this, just this alone?"
"Yes, of course."
She flung herself on her friend's breast, embraced her frenziedly, and went away with her treasure.
The day of the party arrived. M
adame Loisel was a success. She was the prettiest woman present,
elegant, graceful, smiling, and quite above herself with happiness. All the men stared at her, inquired
her name, and asked to be introduced to her. All the Under
-
Secretaries of State were ea
ger to waltz
with her. The Minister noticed her.
< 5 >
She danced madly, ecstatically, drunk with pleasure, with no thought for anything, in the triumph of
her beauty, in the pride of her success, in a cloud of happiness made up of this universal h
omage and
admiration, of the desires she had aroused, of the completeness of a victory so dear to her feminine
heart.
She left about four o'clock in the morning. Since midnight her husband had been dozing in a deserted
little room, in company with th
ree other men whose wives were having a good time. He threw over her
shoulders the garments he had brought for them to go home in, modest everyday clothes, whose
poverty clashed with the beauty of the ball
-
dress. She was conscious of this and was anxious t
o hurry
away, so that she should not be noticed by the other women putting on their costly furs.
Loisel restrained her.
"Wait a little. You'll catch cold in the open. I'm going to fetch a cab."
But she did not listen to him and rapidly de
scended the staircase. When they were out in the street
they could not find a cab; they began to look for one, shouting at the drivers whom they saw passing in
the distance.
They walked down towards the Seine, desperate and shivering. At last they fo
und on the quay one of
those old nightprowling carriages which are only to be seen in Paris after dark, as though they were
ashamed of their shabbiness in the daylight.
It brought them to their door in the Rue des Martyrs, and sadly they walked up to
their own
apartment. It was the end, for her. As for him, he was thinking that he must be at the office at ten.
She took off the garments in which she had wrapped her shoulders, so as to see herself in all her
glory before the mirror. But suddenly s
he uttered a cry. The necklace was no longer round her neck!
< 6 >
"What's the matter with you?" asked her husband, already half undressed.
She turned towards him in the utmost distress.
"I . . . I . . . I've no longer got Madame
Forestier's necklace. . . ."
He started with astonishment.
"What! . . . Impossible!"
They searched in the folds of her dress, in the folds of the coat, in the pockets, everywhere. They
could not find it.
"Are you sure that you still
had it on when you came away from the ball?" he asked.
"Yes, I touched it in the hall at the Ministry."
"But if you had lost it in the street, we should have heard it fall."
"Yes. Probably we should. Did you take the number of the cab?"
"No. You didn't notice it, did you?"
"No."
They stared at one another, dumbfounded. At last Loisel put on his clothes again.
"I'll go over all the ground we walked," he said, "and see if I can't find it."
And he went out. She remained in her evening clothes, lacking strength to get into bed, huddled on a
chair, without volition or power of thought.
Her husband returned about seven. He had found nothing.
He went to the police station, to the
newspapers, to offer a reward, to the cab companies,
everywhere that a ray of hope impelled him.
She waited all day long, in the same state of bewilderment at this fearful catastrophe.
Loisel came home at night, his face lined and pale; he had
discovered nothing.
< 7 >
"You must write to your friend," he said, "and tell her that you've broken the clasp of her necklace
and are getting it mended. That will give us time to look about us."
She wrote at his dictation.
*
By the end of
a week they had lost all hope.
Loisel, who had aged five years, declared:
"We must see about replacing the diamonds."
Next day they took the box which had held the necklace and went to the jewellers whose name was
inside. He consulted hi
s books.
"It was not I who sold this necklace, Madame; I must have merely supplied the clasp."
Then they went from jeweller to jeweller, searching for another necklace like the first, consulting
their memories, both ill with remorse and anguish
of mind.
In a shop at the Palais
-
Royal they found a string of diamonds which seemed to them exactly like the
one they were looking for. It was worth forty thousand francs. They were allowed to have it for thirty
-
six
thousand.
They begged the
jeweller not to sell it for three days. And they arranged matters on the
understanding that it would be taken back for thirty
-
four thousand francs, if the first one were found
before the end of February.
Loisel possessed eighteen thousand francs left
to him by his father. He intended to borrow the rest.
He did borrow it, getting a thousand from one man, five hundred from another, five louis here, three
louis there. He gave notes of hand, entered into ruinous agreements, did business with usurers
and the
whole tribe of money
-
lenders. He mortgaged the whole remaining years of his existence, risked his
signature without even knowing if he could honour it, and, appalled at the agonising face of the future,
at the black misery about to fall upon him,
at the prospect of every possible physical privation and moral
torture, he went to get the new necklace and put down upon the jeweller's counter thirty
-
six thousand
francs.
< 8 >
When Madame Loisel took back the necklace to Madame Forestier, the la
tter said to her in a chilly
voice:
"You ought to have brought it back sooner; I might have needed it."
She did not, as her friend had feared, open the case. If she had noticed the substitution, what would
she have thought? What would she have
said? Would she not have taken her for a thief?
*
Madame Loisel came to know the ghastly life of abject poverty. From the very first she played her part
heroically. This fearful debt must be paid off. She would pay it. The servant was dismissed. They cha
nged
their flat; they took a garret under the roof.
She came to know the heavy work of the house, the hateful duties of the kitchen. She washed the
plates, wearing out her pink nails on the coarse pottery and the bottoms of pans. She washed the dirt
y
linen, the shirts and dish
-
cloths, and hung them out to dry on a string; every morning she took the
dustbin down into the street and carried up the water, stopping on each landing to get her breath. And,
clad like a poor woman, she went to the fruiterer,
to the grocer, to the butcher, a basket on her arm,
haggling, insulted, fighting for every wretched halfpenny of her money.
Every month notes had to be paid off, others renewed, time gained.
Her husband worked in the evenings at putting straig
ht a merchant's accounts, and often at night he
did copying at twopence
-
halfpenny a page.
And this life lasted ten years.
At the end of ten years everything was paid off, everything, the usurer's charges and the
accumulation of superimposed int
erest.
Madame Loisel looked old now. She had become like all the other strong, hard, coarse women of
poor households. Her hair was badly done, her skirts were awry, her
hands were red. She spoke in a
shrill voice, and the water slopped all over the floor when she scrubbed it. But sometimes, when her
husband was at the office, she sat down by the window and thought of that evening long ago, of the ball
at which she had be
en so beautiful and so much admired.
< 9 >
What would have happened if she had never lost those jewels. Who knows? Who knows? How
strange life is, how fickle! How little is needed to ruin or to save!
One Sunday, as she had gone for a walk alo
ng the Champs
-
Elysees to freshen herself after the labours
of the week, she caught sight suddenly of a woman who was taking a child out for a walk. It was
Madame Forestier, still young, still beautiful, still attractive.
Madame Loisel was conscious o
f some emotion. Should she speak to her? Yes, certainly. And now
that she had paid, she would tell her all. Why not?
She went up to her.
"Good morning, Jeanne."
The other did not recognise her, and was surprised at being thus familiarly a
ddressed by a poor
woman.
"But . . . Madame . . ." she stammered. "I don't know . . . you must be making a mistake."
"No . . . I am Mathilde Loisel."
Her friend uttered a cry.
"Oh! . . . my poor Mathilde, how you have changed! . . .
"
"Yes, I've had some hard times since I saw you last; and many sorrows . . . and all on your account."
"On my account! . . . How was that?"
"You remember the diamond necklace you lent me for the ball at the Ministry?"
"Yes. Well?"
"Well, I lost it."
"How could you? Why, you brought it back."
"I brought you another one just like it. And for the last ten years we have been paying for it. You
realise it wasn't easy for us; we had no money. . . . Well, it's paid for at
last, and I'm glad indeed."
< 10 >
Madame Forestier had halted.
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