Mary Jo Salter presents the sonnet sequence “The Death of Argos” by Nicholas Pierce (Day 4)

Nicholas PierceFor two weeks, Monday through Friday, we’re publishing daily, piece by piece, the sonnet sequence “The Death of Argos” by Nicholas Pierce (Photo), presented by Mary Jo Salter.

What new thing can be done with old forms like the sonnet?  One answer comes from a new poet.  In his  first book, In Transit, Nicholas Pierce invents an especially devilish rhyme scheme for an eleven-sonnet sequence, “The Death of Argos.”  The sequence is also an elegant narrative, an affecting love story set in contemporary Greece, while calling up The Odyssey. Inspired by a blank verse sonnet sequence by the late Claudia Emerson, which unspools as two tercets, a central couplet, and two more tercets, Pierce goes Emerson one better by rhyming aba, bdb, bb, dbd, ebe, every time.  Yes, that’s six b’s per fourteen lines. And a rhyming couplet “turn” in the dead center, another radical move.

Today we add two sonnets, as sonnet four runs into sonnet five.  Their italics reproduce the handwritten journal of the speaker, who remembers his first encounters with a lover in Greece.

1.

A few key seconds haven’t yet come back,

if they ever were recorded. Who can say

why the dogs didn’t, finally, attack,

much less what would’ve happened if they did?

On foot, defenseless, we were easy prey

to start with—then my cousin and I slid

into a ditch, scrambling to get away.

The footage skips ahead when I replay

this moment, picking back up with his leg

already broken and the dogs at bay—

or nowhere to be seen, at least. Less vague

is what came afterward: the brief but none-

too-gentle ambulance ride, the X-ray

revealing that the break was a clean one.

2.

The incident put me in mind of S.,

whom I’d been trying not to think about

for a few months, not wanting to address

how cruel I’d been when I abruptly stopped

texting and calling her back; stopped without

so much as an excuse, letting her opt

both of us out. Of course, our falling out

wasn’t what I reflected on en route

to the hospital. Rather, it was her own

encounter with a dog, which left no doubt

a deeper scar than the two running down

her chin, down from the edges of her smile.

She told me that she didn’t run or shout;

was, when the pit bull lunged, still in denial.

3.

Still in shock, sleep all but impossible,

I read the journal from my trip to Greece

after returning from the hospital;

read long into the night, about the night

when, meeting for a drink, we found release

from loneliness; about how S., despite

knowing me all of an hour, felt at ease

enough to share how many surgeries

she’d had to have in the last year, her face

still not quite hers; about the binding lease

that forced her to recover in the place

next door to where the pit bull went on living;

about its owner, who refused her pleas

to see the dog put down; about surviving.

4.

May 28th—Watching from the top deck

as Paros shrinks on the horizon, then,

in an instant, vanishes; as each new speck

becomes an island, looms, recedes from view.

On my way back to Athens, once again

on my own, though we plan to rendezvous,

and I, just as soon as she gets in.

It’s strange how quickly things can happen when

abroad, that we could meet and fall in love

(is there a faster-acting medicine?)

on the same day; that I, at this remove,

perhaps because of it, could know we had.

Stranger still, that the scarring on her chin

should be what drew me to her, though I’m glad

5.

it did. We met on a bus taking her

to Naousa (rhymes with “wowza”), where I’d been

the day before, and taking me, as per

my host’s advice, to drafty Golden Beach.

We chatted till she disembarked, within

those few short minutes managing to reach

the same conclusion. With this very pen,

on a scrap of paper torn from this Moleskin,

she jotted down her number. Pausing here,

I flipped to the back pocket, where the ten

digits had lived for almost half a year;

though I had no intention, not that night,

of calling her, no clue how I’d begin

to explain myself. “I’m sorry” sounded trite.

Nicholas Pierce is pursuing a Ph.D. in Poetry at the University of Utah. His poems have appeared in 32 PoemsBirmingham Poetry ReviewThe Hopkins Review, and Subtropics, among other journals. His first book, In Transit, won the 2021 New Criterion Poetry Prize. “The Death of Argos” appeared in that volume, published by Criterion Books.

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