Answer this question from the chapter "the address"

Dear Student,

The narrator did not want to remember the address finally because the objects that were linked in her memory with the familiar life of former times had lost their value when severed from the connections in her mind and placed in strange surroundings. The house was devoid of meaning to her and had changed into just a mere address which she would rather forget. It was just a small rented room with shreds of black-out paper which still hung over the windows from the time of war and contained no more than a handful of cutlery in narrow table drawer. The narrator resolved to forget the address which according to her would be the easiest thing to do in spite of the fact that it was a tangible presence. The harder task would be to forget her memories which in spite of being intangible were far more real to her than the furniture which belonged to her mother or the house where they had lived. 

Regards

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