Table of Contents
- 1 What does della sell to raise additional money from the gift of the Maggie?
- 2 Who did Della do for money for Jim’s present?
- 3 What does Della do to get more money to buy a Christmas gift for her husband?
- 4 How did Della save her $1 and 87 cents?
- 5 How do Jim and Della raise money?
- 6 What does Della do with money?
- 7 What did della sell her hair for in the gift of the Magi?
- 8 How many pennies are in the gift of the Magi?
What does della sell to raise additional money from the gift of the Maggie?
Selling her hair for $20 is a great personal sacrifice for Della. The author makes clear that the couple is experiencing financial hardship, and does not own many nice things.
How did Della save money in the gift of the Magi?
Della had saved the money by bargaining hard about prices with the grocer, the vegetable man, and the butcher.
Who did Della do for money for Jim’s present?
Della asks Madame Sofronie if she would be willing to buy Della’s long, beautiful brown hair. Madame Sofronie agrees and pays her $20. Della is then able to use this $20 to buy Jim a Christmas gift, namely a gold watch chain for his prized pocket watch. Selling her hair for $20 is a great personal sacrifice for Della.
Why did Della save money?
Della needed the money to buy her husband Jim a Christmas Present. Throughout the year Della scrapes by, but on Christmas she wants to give Jim something special and he wants the same for her. On this memorable Christmas, they each get each other a very unique present.
What does Della do to get more money to buy a Christmas gift for her husband?
Della cuts and sells her hair to get money to buy her husband a chain for his watch. Della does this ultimately because she loves Jim, her husband. Within the context, Della also does this because they are a very poor couple.
What did Della do for money?
What did she have to sell? The only thing of value Della had to sell was her hair. So, she went to a Mne. Sofronie, who dealt in hair goods, and asked how much the woman would pay for her hair.
How did Della save her $1 and 87 cents?
Della had amassed the sum of one one dollar and eighty-seven cents by bringing scrupulous awareness of her spending on groceries for herself and Jim. Ultimately, she had saved less than two dollars by the day before Christmas and had earmarked that money as her fund to purchase a gift for her husband.
How do Jim and Della do to generate money?
Della and Jim sell valuable things to get money to buy gifts for each other, because they are poor. Both Della and Jim give up valuable possessions so they can buy Christmas gifts for each other.
How do Jim and Della raise money?
In order to afford a gift for each other, Della and Jim (independently) sell their most prized possession to get money for the gift. Jim sells his watch. Della sells her beautiful hair. Della’s gift to Jim is a chain for his watch (which he just sold).
How did Della save her dollar eighty-seven cents?
What does Della do with money?
What did Della want to do with the money? She wanted to buy her husband a Christmas gift.
What did della need the money for in the gift of eNotes?
Something fine and rare and sterling—something just a little bit near to being worthy of the honor of being owned by Jim. Della does not mind making a sacrifice in order to get something nice for her husband. She sells her hair and makes twenty dollars. With that, she buys a special watch band for her husband’s favorite watch.
What did della sell her hair for in the gift of the Magi?
Della proceeds to sell her lovely hair to Madame Sofronie for twenty dollars and ends up purchasing Jim a costly platinum fob chain for his valuable watch, which is a worthy Christmas present.
Why did della cry on Christmas Eve in the gift of the Magi?
The narrator also mentions the sixty cents of Della’s $1.87 was in pennies, which emphasizes her economical behavior, and she sobs alone on Christmas Eve out of fear that she will not be able to buy her husband a worthy present.
How many pennies are in the gift of the Magi?
In fact, sixty cents of her savings are in pennies. Pennies saved one and two at a time by bulldozing the grocer and the vegetable man and the butcher until one’s cheeks burned with the silent imputation of parsimony that such close dealing implied.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAPZC7o6Y9k