only then would he let me - TM: this repeated phrase conveys how her husband gradually allowed her more access to his physical and psychological injuries, the frozen river which ran through his face - TM: His scar - metaphorically, time has frozen his raw emotion and perhaps left him rather cold., the foetus of metal beneath his chest - TM: Comparing the bullet to a baby makes it seem vulnerable but also a growing issue emotionally, a sweating, unexploded mine buried deep in his mind - TM: time is healing his physical injuries but the trauma (the mine) grew and has become more urgent to deal with, Summer is fading - A: the "best" time of the year could be a metaphor for the women's prime of life, young mothers assemble - A: their time no longer belongs to them, they must be at the service of their children, the wind is ruining their courting- places - A: their more exciting and romantic past has been eroded by time and their new roles as wives and now mothers, their beauty has thickened - A: Larkin observes that these women have become less attractive by this time in their lives, something is pushing them to the side of their own lives - A: Larkin implies that time passing and having children means the mothers are no longer their own priority,

Time: Eduqas Anthology

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