We have been driving in fog all morning, but the fog is lifting now. The
little seaside villages are___1__, one by one. "There is my grandmother‘s
house,” I say,___2__ across the bay to a shabby old house.
I am in Nova Scotia on a pilgrimage (朝圣) with Lise, my
granddaughter,seeking roots for her, retracing (追溯)___3__ memory for me. Lise
was one of the mobile children,__4__ from house to house in childhood. She longs
for a sense of___5__, and so we have come to Nova Scotia where my husband and I
were born and where our ancestors___6__ for 200 years.
We soon___7__ by the house and I tell her what it was like here, the
memories___8__ back, swift as the tide(潮水)。
Suddenly, I long to walk again in the __9__ where I was once so gloriously
a child. It still__10__ a member of the family, but has not been lived in for a
while. We cannot go into the house, but I can still walk__11__ the rooms in
memory. Here, my mother __12__ in her bedroom window and wrote in her diary. I
can still see the enthusiastic family__13__ into and out of the house. I could
never have enough of being__14__ them. However, that was long after those
childhood days. Lise__15__ attentively as I talk and then says, "So this is
where I__16__; where I belong.”
She has___17__ her roots. To know where I come from is one of the great
longings of the human___18__。 To be rooted is "to have an origin”。 We need__19__
origin. Looking backward,we discover what is unique in us; learn the___20__of
"I”。 We must all go home again-in reality or memory.