By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Summarise the two visits — first (Dorling refuses entry) and second (narrator sees objects, leaves)
  • 2Analyse Mrs. Dorling's character — those who profited from persecution
  • 3Explain why the narrator decides NOT to reclaim her mother's possessions
  • 4Discuss themes: Holocaust aftermath, memory and objects, letting go of the past
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Why this chapter matters
Holocaust/post-war story. Objects without meaning. Mrs. Dorling as profiteer. Narrator's decision NOT to take her mother's things is a guaranteed question. The story's quiet devastation — things survived but people didn't.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

The Address — Marga Minco

"I had no desire to possess them. They were just things."

1. About the Story

'The Address' by Marga Minco (Dutch-Jewish writer, 1920–2023) is a POST-WAR story set after World War II. The narrator, a young Jewish woman, returns to Holland after the war. Her mother is DEAD (killed in the Holocaust). Before being taken away, her mother left their valuable possessions with a non-Jewish acquaintance, Mrs. Dorling. The narrator goes to reclaim these things — but finds that objects without the people they belonged to are EMPTY, meaningless things.


2. Characters

The Narrator (unnamed, daughter)

  • Jewish woman, Holocaust survivor
  • Returns to Holland to find traces of her mother
  • First visit: Mrs. Dorling REFUSES to recognise her, refuses entry
  • Second visit: allowed in. Sees her mother's things — and feels NOTHING
  • Realises: 'home' was her MOTHER, not the objects
  • Leaves — and resolves never to return

Mrs. Dorling

  • Non-Jewish Dutch woman — 'an old acquaintance' of the narrator's mother
  • Took in (or appropriated) the family's valuable possessions during the war
  • Cold, unwelcoming: 'Have you come back? I thought nobody would.'
  • Keeps the narrator's family things — as if they were hers now
  • Represents: those who PROFITED from Jewish persecution

Mrs. Dorling's Daughter

  • Young girl, wearing the narrator's mother's cardigan
  • Doesn't know who the narrator is
  • Represents: the NEXT GENERATION, unknowingly living with other people's stolen belongings

3. Plot Summary

Phase 1: The First Visit (Immediately After the War)

  • The narrator goes to the address: 46 Marconi Street
  • Mrs. Dorling opens the door
  • DOESN'T welcome her. 'Have you come back? I thought nobody would.'
  • Refuses to let her in
  • The narrator leaves, shaken
  • Notice: 'I thought nobody would come back' — Dorling expected the family to DIE

Phase 2: The Second Visit (Some Time Later)

  • The narrator returns — this time, Dorling is NOT home
  • The daughter lets her in
  • The narrator sees: ALL her mother's things. The tablecloth. The plates. The spoons.
  • Everything arranged WRONG — in Dorling's house, not in HOME
  • The narrator sits, looking at the objects
  • She feels... NOTHING
  • These things no longer BELONG to anyone. Their owners are dead. The objects are EMPTY.

Phase 3: The Decision

  • The narrator gets up
  • She does NOT take anything
  • She leaves — and resolves never to come back
  • 'I had no desire to possess them. They were just things.'
  • The 'address' now means NOTHING to her

4. Themes

1. The Holocaust and Its Aftermath

The story is set in the SHADOW of the Holocaust. The mother is dead. The family home is gone. The objects survive — but the PEOPLE don't. The story asks: what remains AFTER genocide?

2. Memory, Loss, and Objects

Objects carry MEMORY only when connected to the LIVING. Without the mother, HER things are just THINGS. The narrator realises: 'home' was never the objects. Home was her mother. And her mother is gone.

3. Those Who Profited from Persecution

Mrs. Dorling represents the people who took Jewish property — expecting the owners wouldn't return. Her coldness ('I thought nobody would come back') reveals her expectation and her GUILT.

4. Letting Go

The narrator's decision NOT to take the objects is an act of LIBERATION. She doesn't need her mother's things. She carries her mother in MEMORY. 'I forgot her address' — forgetting the address = freeing herself from the burden of the past.


5. Key Lines

  • 'Have you come back? I thought nobody would.' — Dorling's greeting. Brutal.
  • 'I found myself in a room I did not know but knew everything.' — The objects in an alien setting.
  • 'I had no desire to possess them. They were just things.' — The story's climax.
  • 'I forgot her address.' — The liberation.

6. Conclusion

'The Address' is about what WAR takes — and what it can't:

  • War takes LIVES (the mother)
  • War takes HOMES (the family's house)
  • War scatters POSSESSIONS (Dorling's house)
  • BUT: the narrator realises that POSSESSIONS were never what mattered
  • What mattered was the MOTHER — and the mother lives in MEMORY, not in objects
  • Leaving the objects behind = leaving the war behind

'The Address' — a story about visiting the objects of your dead mother, and discovering you don't need them. The address you need is not a street number. It's the memory you carry inside.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Author
Marga Minco (1920–2023) — Dutch-Jewish writer, Holocaust survivor
Narrator
Jewish woman, returns to Holland after WWII. Mother dead in Holocaust.
Mrs. Dorling
'Old acquaintance' who kept family possessions. Cold: 'I thought nobody would come back.'
Expected them to die
Climax
Narrator sees mother's things → feels NOTHING → leaves without taking anything. 'They were just things.'
Ending
'I forgot her address.' Liberation from the past.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
The narrator doesn't take the things because she's too upset
She doesn't take them because she REALISES they don't matter. Objects without the people they belonged to are EMPTY. Letting go is a DELIBERATE, liberating choice, not a failure of nerve.
WATCH OUT
Mrs. Dorling was just a helpful neighbour who stored the possessions
Her behaviour (cold greeting, 'I thought nobody would come back', keeping everything as her own) shows she EXPECTED the family to be wiped out and intended to KEEP the possessions permanently. She's a profiteer of persecution.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM
How does Mrs. Dorling's behaviour reveal her true character? What does 'I thought nobody would come back' tell us?
Q2MEDIUM
Why does the narrator decide NOT to take her mother's possessions when she has a chance to reclaim them? What does this decision mean thematically?
Q3MEDIUM
How does 'The Address' portray the aftermath of the Holocaust without describing the Holocaust directly?

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Two visits: (1) Dorling refuses entry — 'I thought nobody would come back.' (2) Daughter lets narrator in — sees everything, leaves with nothing.
  • Mrs. Dorling: kept possessions, expected family wouldn't return. Profiteer, not protector.
  • Climax: narrator surrounded by mother's things — feels NOTHING. Objects = empty without the living.
  • 'I had no desire to possess them. They were just things.' 'I forgot her address.' — liberation.
  • Themes: Holocaust aftermath, memory and objects, letting go, those who profited, home = people not things.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 4-6 marks · CBSE Class 11 English Snapshots Chapter 2

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / VSA (1 mark)11Author's name, what 'I forgot her address' signifies, Mrs. Dorling's profession
Short Answer (2-3 marks)21Mrs. Dorling's character, two visits comparison, narrator's realisation about objects
Long Answer (4-5 marks)41Why narrator doesn't reclaim objects, story's theme of memory vs objects, Holocaust aftermath without direct description
Prep strategy
  • The two visits must be described with specific detail: First visit — Dorling refuses entry, 'hostile surprise.' Second visit — daughter lets narrator in, narrator sees objects, leaves with nothing. The contrast IS the story's structure.
  • For Mrs. Dorling character questions: three points — (1) expected family annihilated, (2) took possessions for herself, (3) 'I thought nobody would come back' reveals deliberate profiteering. This three-point structure earns full marks.
  • For 'why narrator doesn't take things': (1) objects feel empty without mother, (2) home = people not things, (3) 'I forgot her address' = liberation from the past. All three elements needed for full marks.
  • Never say the narrator is 'upset' or 'scared' — she is not. She feels NOTHING when she sees the objects. The absence of feeling IS the point — grief has moved beyond objects to their underlying absence.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Holocaust literature: the ethics and aesthetics of bearing witness

Grief psychology: continuing bonds theory and the role of objects

Post-war restitution: the unresolved legacy of Holocaust possessions

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Two visits question: always describe BOTH visits with specific detail: (1) First — Dorling refuses entry, 'hostile surprise,' door closed. (2) Second — daughter lets narrator in, familiar objects seen, narrator leaves WITHOUT taking anything. The contrast between wanting access (first) and not wanting the objects (second) IS the story's movement.
  2. For 'why narrator doesn't take things': organise as (1) objects feel wrong/empty without mother, (2) 'home = people not things,' (3) 'I forgot her address' as liberation from the past. All three earn full marks. Saying only 'she was too sad' or 'she didn't want to remember' loses marks.
  3. Mrs. Dorling character: ALWAYS use the phrase 'profiteer of persecution.' Then support with: 'I thought nobody would come back' (expected annihilation), keeping possessions as if her own, and the cold greeting. This trio earns full marks.
  4. For theme questions: the story's central insight is 'objects without their owners are EMPTY — home is the people who created it, not the things they owned.' State this claim explicitly, then support with two specific textual details.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Read Primo Levi's 'Survival in Auschwitz' (1947) and compare with 'The Address.' Both are survivor narratives about the Holocaust. Levi writes from inside the camps; Minco writes from the aftermath. Both use restraint and precision. But Levi names the camps and describes the mechanisms; Minco never names anything. What does this difference in directness say about how different survivor-writers processed their experience? What are the ethics of direct vs. indirect Holocaust narrative?
  • Research W.G. Sebald's 'Austerlitz' (2001) — a novel about a man searching for his pre-war Jewish family's history through photographs and objects. Sebald, like Minco, uses objects as trace-evidence of lives erased by the Holocaust. Compare the function of objects in both texts: in 'The Address,' objects are EMPTY without the people; in 'Austerlitz,' objects are FULL of encrypted history that must be decoded. What does each approach say about whether the past can be recovered?
  • The concept of 'transitional objects' (D.W. Winnicott, 1953) — objects that help a child transition from absolute dependence on the mother to independent selfhood. Apply this concept to the narrator's relationship with her mother's possessions. Are the objects TRANSITIONAL (could have helped the narrator accept loss and move on) or are they TOO CHARGED (the loss too total for transitional objects to function)? What does the narrator's final 'forgetting' suggest about whether transitional objects work for traumatic loss?
  • Investigate the Dutch context of the story: Holland had one of the HIGHEST RATES of Jewish deportation in Western Europe — approximately 73% of Dutch Jews were killed (compared to ~25% in France). Dutch historians debate the role of Dutch society — the bureaucracy, the collaborators, the bystanders. Mrs. Dorling represents the 'bystander' category. Research the 'Wannsee Conference' (1942) and the Dutch deportation process. How does knowing this historical specificity change the moral weight of Dorling's 'I thought nobody would come back'?

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

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Last reviewed on 26 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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