Read the excerpt from "'Why do I love' You, Sir?". The Wind does not require the Grass To answer—Wherefore when He pass She cann
ot keep Her place. What is being described in these lines? how the wind looks like a woman how the wind pushes the grass how the grass appears upright how the wind feels when it blows
In the lines, "He" is the wind. It says when "He", or the wind passes, "She cannot keep Her place." "She" is the grass. Since she is not able to stay in her place, we know the wind has pushed the grass over. There is no description of the wind looking like a woman, especially because in these lines the wind is male. The grass is not described as standing or being upright. Also, the way the grass moves is being described, not the way the wind feels.
American attitudes about the war change radically, Americans attitudes about the economy, about giving to the war. The war is not part of the culture; the war is the culture. Everything is viewed through the prism of the war effort.