Strike Anywhere Match

Eighteen pairs of eyes fix on me,
or on anything in the general direction

of the front of the classroom. No one
actually yawns, though their faces look

like yawning. Outside, the rain is barely
leaving pencil marks on the roof. Here,

it's mostly silent. Today the story is
about a pig in a lab, whose organs

are being genetically engineered
for eventual transplant to victims of

a plague. What does the world look like
if one believes in the superiority of

humans to other species? What use-
fulness does sacrifice have in the world?

The students look at me as if I'm the lab
animal in the crate, and they're the scientists

circling the room with clipboards and pens.
I dearly want to know: what will it take

to kindle a fire, get them to care
about stories and poems, warm up

to metaphor and meaning? Toward the end
of the session, they shut their tablets

and zip backpacks close, heave out of their
seats and walk out of the room— expressions

mostly unchanged as I erase the board, return
the matchstick to its box marked "strike anywhere."

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