What it is saying is it is like having a peanut butter jelly sandwich without the bread. It is ridiculous and something that is needed to make a whole of something. So like per say, you have a teddy bear but you buy that teddy bear but it has no filling in it. So it's like claiming to be a car salesman, without the cars. I hope this helps, sorry if it doesn't make sense.
The author states that both Granuaile and the queen were not young but proud and remarkable.
I'm not sure if that's enough but I found it on paragraph 9
Explanation:
It is in the introduction and then restated in the conclusion. Each supporting detail is then referred to in each of the body paragraphs one by one. The question is worded very oddly in my opinion so I would say introduction because it fits that answer best, but it could technically be all of them.
The monster is a very intricate character: He's innocent but murders, he's loving but also filled with hatred, he loves humans but is tormented by them. The monster tells Victor that he was born a loving person, and was forced to kill William, Elizabeth, and Clerval. (He tells Walton that he didn't actually enjoy killing them, and that he hated himself more every time he did it) Eventually, once Victor dies, the monster says that he's in complete anguish, and vows to travel into the North Pole and set himself on fire.
-T.B.