NCERT Solutions for Class 11 English (Snapshots) Chapter 2: The Address by Marga Minco
Complete solutions for Class 11 English Snapshots Chapter 2 – “The Address” by Marga Minco: an original summary, the theme, word meanings and every textbook exercise question answered in detailed, exam-ready prose. The questions are reproduced exactly as in the NCERT Snapshots book; the summary and all answers are written originally by ClearStudy.
About the author
Marga Minco (born Sara Menco, 1920) is a Dutch journalist and writer of Jewish descent. She lived through the Second World War in the Netherlands, during which most of her family was deported by the Nazis and killed; she alone survived by going into hiding. This personal experience of loss runs through much of her writing. Her best-known work, Het bittere kruid (“Bitter Herbs”, 1957), is a quiet, restrained chronicle of a Jewish family destroyed by the war. “The Address” carries the same spare, understated style, telling a story of dispossession and grief without melodrama. Marga Minco received several major Dutch literary honours for her contribution to post-war literature.
Summary
“The Address” is narrated by a young woman who returns to her city after the Second World War in search of her dead mother’s possessions. Years earlier, during the war, her mother had told her about Mrs Dorling – an old acquaintance who had reappeared and begun carrying away the family’s valuables one by one, claiming she wanted to save the nice things in case the family had to flee. The mother gave the narrator an address to remember: Number 46, Marconi Street.
After the Liberation, the narrator is at first unwilling to revisit those stored objects, afraid of being confronted with reminders of a life that no longer exists. Eventually curiosity draws her to Mrs Dorling’s house. On her first visit the woman who answers the door refuses to recognise her and turns her away, even though she is wearing the narrator’s mother’s green knitted cardigan.
On a second visit, Mrs Dorling’s teenage daughter lets her in. The living room is crowded with the narrator’s mother’s belongings – the silver cutlery, the woollen tablecloth with its familiar burn mark, the antique box of spoons, the pewter plate from the still-life. Surrounded by these objects, the narrator feels not comfort but oppression: torn from their old setting and arranged tastelessly in a strange, musty room, they have lost all their meaning and emotional value. Realising this, she leaves abruptly without claiming anything. As she walks away she resolves to forget the address forever – of all the things she must forget, she decides, that will be the easiest.
Theme & message
The story explores the human predicament that follows war: loss, displacement and the breaking of bonds that once gave life meaning. Its central insight is that objects derive their worth not from themselves but from the relationships and memories attached to them. Severed from the home and the people they belonged to, the mother’s possessions become lifeless and even painful to see. The narrator’s decision to walk away shows a mature choice to let go of the past and move on, refusing to let grief and material things anchor her to a vanished world. The story also quietly exposes opportunism – Mrs Dorling’s “help” was really plunder – and the cold indifference that war can breed.
Word meanings
| Word | Meaning |
|---|---|
| searchingly | in an examining, probing way |
| a chink | a narrow opening |
| fleetingly | briefly, for a very short time |
| cardigan | a knitted woollen jacket buttoned at the front |
| musty | smelling stale, damp and old |
| name-plate | a small sign showing a name on a door |
| jamb | the side post of a doorway |
| acquaintance | a person one knows slightly |
| lugging | carrying something heavy with effort |
| crick | a painful stiffness, especially in the back or neck |
| crockery | plates, cups and dishes |
| pityingly | with a feeling of pity or sympathy |
| reprovingly | in a disapproving, scolding manner |
| Liberation | the freeing of the country at the end of the war |
| oppressed | weighed down; made to feel troubled |
| cumbersome | large, heavy and awkward to use |
| pewter | a grey metal made of tin and lead |
| sideboard | a long cupboard for crockery and cutlery |
| black-out paper | dark paper used to cover windows during wartime |
| severed | cut off or separated |
| resolved | firmly decided |
| Hanukkah | the Jewish Feast of Lights, a festival in December |
Textbook exercise solutions
Reproduced verbatim from NCERT Snapshots; answers written originally by ClearStudy.
1. ‘Have you come back?’ said the woman. ‘I thought that no one had come back.’ Does this statement give some clue about the story? If yes, what is it?
2. The story is divided into pre-War and post-War times. What hardships do you think the girl underwent during these times?
3. Why did the narrator of the story want to forget the address?
4. ‘The Address’ is a story of human predicament that follows war. Comment.
Extra questions
Short answer
1. Who was Mrs Dorling?
2. What was the address that the narrator’s mother gave her?
3. How did the narrator first recognise that she was at the right house?
4. Why did the objects in the living room oppress the narrator?
5. What was special about the woollen tablecloth?
Long answer
6. Compare and contrast the attitudes of the narrator and Mrs Dorling towards the possessions.
7. “The narrator’s decision to forget the address reflects emotional maturity rather than defeat.” Discuss.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. Who is the author of ‘The Address’?
(a) Katherine Mansfield (b) Marga Minco (c) Pearl S. Buck (d) Roald Dahl
2. The story is set in which country?
(a) Germany (b) France (c) Holland (the Netherlands) (d) England
3. What was the full address the narrator went to?
(a) Number 64, Marconi Street (b) Number 46, Marconi Street (c) Number 46, Dorling Street (d) Number 4, Marconi Street
4. What was Mrs Dorling wearing that the narrator recognised?
(a) A brown coat (b) A shapeless hat (c) Her mother’s green knitted cardigan (d) A silk scarf
5. Who opened the door on the narrator’s second visit?
(a) Mrs Dorling (b) The narrator’s mother (c) A girl of about fifteen (d) A neighbour
6. The burn mark that confirmed the objects’ identity was on the:
(a) cardigan (b) woollen tablecloth (c) pewter plate (d) sideboard
7. The Hanukkah candle-holder in the passage is a symbol of the family’s:
(a) wealth (b) Jewish identity (c) carelessness (d) modern taste
8. Why did the narrator leave Mrs Dorling’s house abruptly?
(a) She missed her train (b) The objects oppressed her and lost all meaning (c) She was afraid of the girl (d) Mrs Dorling returned
9. The phrase ‘I thought that no one had come back’ hints at:
(a) a long journey (b) the deportation and death of Jews in the war (c) a family quarrel (d) Mrs Dorling’s illness
10. The main theme of ‘The Address’ is:
(a) the joy of reunion (b) loss, dispossession and letting go after war (c) the value of wealth (d) the importance of friendship
Assertion–Reason – choose: (a) A and R true, R explains A; (b) A and R true, R does not explain A; (c) A true, R false; (d) A false, R true.
1. Assertion (A): Mrs Dorling refused to recognise the narrator at the door.
Reason (R): She felt guilty about having taken the family’s possessions and did not want to return them.
2. Assertion (A): The narrator decided to forget the address.
Reason (R): The possessions had lost their value once they were severed from her former life.
3. Assertion (A): The narrator felt happy and comforted on seeing her mother’s belongings.
Reason (R): The objects were arranged beautifully and reminded her of her happy childhood.
4. Assertion (A): The green knitted cardigan was important in the story.
Reason (R): It helped the narrator confirm that she had found the right house.
5. Assertion (A): ‘The Address’ depicts the suffering caused by war.
Reason (R): The narrator lost her family and home, and returned to a life of grief and emptiness.
Exam tips
How to score full marks on ‘The Address’
1. Always connect the story to its historical background – the persecution of Jews in the Second World War. The line “I thought that no one had come back” is a favourite for clue/inference questions.
2. Remember the key symbols: the green cardigan and the burn-marked tablecloth (proof of identity), the Hanukkah candle-holder (Jewish identity), and the musty, tasteless room (lost meaning).
3. For value-based questions, stress the theme: objects lose meaning when severed from the life they belonged to, and letting go is a sign of maturity.
4. Use the exact names – Mrs Dorling, Number 46 Marconi Street, Mrs S – and write character-based answers in well-organised paragraphs with examples from the text.
FAQs
What is the story ‘The Address’ about?
It is about a young woman who, after the Second World War, visits the house where her dead mother’s possessions were taken, only to find that the objects have lost all meaning in their strange new setting, so she decides to leave them and forget the address.
Who is Mrs Dorling in ‘The Address’?
Mrs Dorling was an old acquaintance of the narrator’s mother who, during the war, gradually carried away the family’s valuables under the pretext of saving them, and later refused to recognise the narrator.
Why did the narrator decide to forget the address?
Because the possessions, torn from her former home and arranged tastelessly in a strange room, had lost all their value and only caused her pain; forgetting the address let her move on from her grief.
Questions are taken verbatim from the NCERT Snapshots textbook; the summary and answers are written originally by ClearStudy.
