“A Piece of String”
By: Guy de Maupassant
Theme:
               The theme of a Piece of String has to do with the meaness, cruelty and
               injustice of humanity human selfishness, wickedness, envy, spite, greed and
               other bad qualities, thought of guilty, distrust and the contempt of the
               peasantry.
Settings:
               The setting is a small town with a country flavor. It has long roads and a
               public square. The story mostly took place outside in a town called
               Goderville. Hue characters in this story went many places in Goderville
               they went many places in Goderville they went to the Mayor’s office and to
               the public square and many other places like the maître Jourdain’s tarem.
               The setting in this story is more rural.
Characters:
         Matre Hauchecorne
                     Maitre Hauchecorne is the protagonist in the Piece of String he’s a
            thrifty man with rheumatism who does not let a discarded piece of string on
            the ground got to waste. However, Maitre Hauchecorne is too proud to
            allow his enemy see him pick it up. Unfortunately, his embarrassed reaction
            causes suspicion and when a wallet goes missing hauchecorne is falsely
            accused of stealing it.
             Maître Malandian
                      Is Hauchecorne’s enemy Malandian is a harness maker a person
              that makes equestrian supplies, such as saddles. Hauchecorne and
              malandian had once had a quarrel about a halter, and they had borne each
              other malice ever since.
             William Shalespeare
                        Maupassant’s emotional compass is so often much more modest
              and confined. Many of his more than three hundred short stories treat his
              favorite subject the Norman countryside and its inhabitants meaning almost
              always the peasants. It surely does not take much to undo them or to ruin
              them insist Maupassant.
Conflict:
               The conflict of the story arises when Hauchecorne’s adversary Malandian,
               witnesses Hauchecorne pick up something fron the street.
               1.   The first conflict is the lack of trust.
               2.   The other conflict is Hauchecorne’s own pride.
               3.   Hauchecorne’s egotistical pursuit of his reputation.
               4.   The overall conflict is the corrupt socio-economic system that led to a
                    culture of backstabbing peasants.
               The first conflict is the lack of trust namely between Hauchecorne and
               Malandian. Then, hauchecorne and the mayor. But eventually, the reader
               sees that it is a lack of trust amongst/between all the peasants themselves.
              Guy de Maupassant had a similar view about the peasantry, that they are
              untrustworthy. Being from a higher class, he may have prejudged these
              people, not thinking their craftiness and treachery is the result of a
              struggling economic class.
              The other conflict is Hauchecorne’s own pride it seems that Maupassant
              makes it a point to note that the norman peasants were economical to the
              peasants were economical to the point of bring stingly.
              The overall conflict is the corrupt socio-economic system that led to a
              culture of backstabbing peasants.
Complications:
            The peasants milked went and came, perplexed, always in fear of being
            cheated, not daring to decide watching in fear of being cheated not daring
            to decide, watching the vendor’s eye, every trying to find the trick in the
            man and the flaw in the beast.
              The other peasant view him as a thief, but the point Maupassant ticks to
              make is that the peasants do so, knowing they’d probably have stolen the
              wallet if they had the chances.
              At this point, Maitre Hauchecorne realizes he is ruined, the outcome of the
              conflict is made clear.
Climax:
              The first climax occurs when Maitre Hauchecorne is accussed of stealing
              Maitre Houlbreque’s pocket book. Hauchecorne’s accuser is Mitre
              Malandain his ouch enemy. The two once had a quarrel about a seemingly
              inconsequential matter and have hated each other since.
              One can conclude that Malandian malice hatred each other since. One can
              conclude that malandian’s malice led him to accuse Hauchecorne with little
              proof.
Resolution:
              A “Piece of String” Maitre hauchecorne who has been exonerated of the
              crime of stealing a man’s wallet has gone around to tell his story all over
              again, exulting in his success. However, in his doing so the suspiciously
              native of the Normans causes them to suspend belief and revert to their
              natural suspicion. When Maitre Hauchecorne is punced in the stomach
              and shouted at by a farmer and later called an old rascal “by another, he is
              stunned.
              At last he understood people were accusing him of having gotten an
              accomplished to return the pocketbook.
              He tried to deny it, the whole table burst into laughter.
              At this point, Maitre Hauchecorne realizes he is ruined the outcome of the
              conflict is made clear.
 PROJECT
           IN
LITERATURE
         Submitted by:
  Maria Vanessa Agnes Chambon
         Submitted to:
Mrs. Josephine Orzales