The Vestal Lady On Brattle was Corso’s first published poetry volume. Taken as a whole, it’s not a strong effort, but it shows glimpses of the brilliance he would soon grow into.
There were a couple truly compelling poems here. Greenwich Village Suicide is as haunting as it is abrupt:
Arms outstretched hands flat against the windowsides She looks down Thinks of Bartok, Van Gogh And New Yorker cartoons She falls
They take her away with a Daily News on her face And a storekeeper throws hot water on the sidewalk
And Thoughts On A Japanese Movie is pure lyric beauty in a small package:
Let us love a thing together once A thing vermilion
The plain is wide and many colors Lie beneath the chestnut tree
Let us go there You shall be my bride
I want to run vermilion through your hair
Requiem for “Bird” Parker, Musician is a poem set to jazz rhythms which showed promise of things to come. Corso also begin to develop his knack for imagery in this early volume:
You, whose mother’s lover was grass in the greenest season, shall be born bastard in his warm green hands and he shall be ephemeral and shall not have enough time to teach you sun and rain and wind, yet you shall rock rock in his warm green hands until the jealous season murders him.
Had the balance of the poems surrounding these been good, The Vestal Lady of Brattle would have been an outstanding first effort. They were not. Most of the balance is forgettable. But for the few that stand out, and those glimpses of the talent to come, this volume is necessary for any Corso fan.
In this first book of poetry by the great beat poet Gregory Corso, we see some wonderful work from an artist who is just getting started. My personal favourites are 'Coney Island' (even though Corso himself was not a huge fan of this poem!), 'King Crow' (which has a wonderful internal meter to it and which features the crow onomatopoeia of 'skeeack!' which crops up in some of Kerouac's work too - a thought: who is copying who here?) and 'In the Early Morning' (which contains very intense, vivid imagery). I managed to pick up a copy of the original edition (quite rare and hard to find) but for even better value, I recommend the version of Gasoline which also features The Vestal Lady on Brattle and Other Poems, published by City Lights Bookstore. Highly recommended for fans of beat literature.
the most playful of his works— refreshing after gasoline. love to see his favorite motifs (pretty things, birds, destinations,) weave in and out of one another.
Corso continues to develop as my favorite Beat poet! These poems transcend the mind and traditional conventions of English. Read and re-read a young poet at his best