The past simple often suggests a more immediate causal link between two events,
compared with the past perfect:
When he opened his desk, he discovered a dead bird.
(stresses the immediate result, rather than ‘When he had opened his desk …’)
When he’d opened his third present, he looked at the roller skates and smiled.
(not such an immediate or direct relationship; the roller skates may not have
been in the third present)
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