By the way, I wanted to give you my compliments and express my utmost appreciation of your efforts at fighting ignorance in this thread. I haven’t taken a course on meter and scansion in something like six or seven years, and I found your posts to be a quality refresher course. It is absolutely delightful to see someone who is so helpful with her knowledge instead of using pseudo-expertise as a club without any attempt at elucidation.
Conditionals are not tenses, and your usage of “might” {…any school I might attend doesn’t have a “literacy magazine”} wasn’t a conditional; it was, if I remember my terminology, a modal auxiliary which denotes possibility.
For “might” to be used conditionally, it would have to be qualified by an “if” {or “should”} clause:
1/ First Conditional - a possible or likely future
If it rains, I might catch cold
2/ Second Conditional - an unrealised present or imaginary future
a/ If it rained, I would catch cold
b/ If I won the lottery, I might buy a boat
3/ Third Conditional - an unrealised past
If it had rained, I might have caught cold
However, your original sentence fits none of these usages, and is thus not conditional. Further, in order to make it a modal auxiliary denoting future possibility, as you later suggested in the post that I quoted, you would need to change “doesn’t”: “any school I might attend may not have a literacy magazine.” would work.
That makes sense. The line does read to me with strong stress on all three words, but slightly less stress on “Like.” I have not, however, read the entire poem, and I can certainly imagine that’d make a difference.