Answer:
Elisa's character is established in the place where she was safest and most comfortable - the chrysanthemum garden, but it changes when we see her on the road with Henry. Her actions while tending the garden reveal that she felt confident, powerful, and in charge in that setting. This confidence was evident when she skillfully destroys the insects before they can harm the plants. Her pride in her flowers in this setting is also what makes her open up to the stranger, after being wary of him at first. The garden setting provided the opportunity for the man and Elisa to interact in a more intimate way than another setting would, revealing a new side of Elisa.
It affects the story because it makes it more objective. Passepartout doesn't have a personal bias in the matter and doesn't have anything to prove so he doesn't react impulsively and affectionately. You can use this idea and expand it a bit to get the two necessary paragraphs. Be sure to add citations from the actual book.
In the excerpt from Abraham Lincoln´s Gettysburg Address the example of parallelism is
…and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish…
<em>The sentence structure is the same giving it a certain rhythm and the triple repetition with which the information is conveyed more persistently.</em>
What would make a monster frightening is by the appearance of the monster and what would make it endearing is the personality of the monster of how they really are beyond their appearance