Literary Kicks

Opinions, Observations and Research


Favorite Series

Levi Asher's Memoir of the Internet Industry, 1993-2003

Marcel Proust: Beyond The Madeleines

The Great Book Pricing Debate of 2007

Overrated Writers of 2006

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2010
• The Top Ten Crime and Mystery Novels of 2009
• In Gatsby's Tracks: Locating the Valley of Ashes in a 1924 Photo
• A Murder and a Metaphor: Litkicks Mystery Spot #1
All Articles From 2010

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2009
• FINDING THE INTERNET
• Enter Sandman: Neil Gaiman at PEN World Voices
• A Memoir In Progress
All Articles From 2009

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2008
• Francoise Sagan: Sex, Drugs and Literature
• Capitaine Achab
• Les Soixante-Huitards
All Articles From 2008

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2007
• Jonathan Swift and Lady Montagu: an 18th Century Literary Smackdown
• DOES LITERARY FICTION SUFFER FROM DYSFUNCTIONAL PRICING? A Conversation
• Cormac McCarthy: Owning My Hate
All Articles From 2007

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2006
• For Sale: Baby Shoes, Never Worn.
• The Overrated Writers of 2006
• Overrated Writers, Part One: Philip Roth
All Articles From 2006

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2005
• Favorite Poem: The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
• Samuel Taylor Coleridge
• About Us
All Articles From 2005

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2004
• When Corso Dropped his BOMB
• Rod Serling
• Danger on Peaks: Gary Snyder’s Latest
All Articles From 2004

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2003
• Jim Morrison: A ‘Serious’ Poet?
• Villanelles, Sonnets and Meter
• E. E. Cummings
All Articles From 2003

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2002
• Dorothy Parker
• James Joyce
• On Western Haiku
All Articles From 2002

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2001
• Hunter S. Thompson
• Summer Of Love: Hippie Writers & Latter-Day Beats
• J. D. Salinger
All Articles From 2001

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 2000
• Beat News: December 14 2000
• Beat News: April 14 2000
• Beat News: June 16 2000
All Articles From 2000

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 1999
• Beat News: April 4 1999
• Beat News: June 20 1999
• LitKicks Summer Poetry Happening at the Bitter End
All Articles From 1999

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 1998
• Ed Sanders
• Beat News: November 4 1998
• Jack Micheline
All Articles From 1998

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 1997
• Sliced Bardo: A William S. Burroughs Memorial
• Tales of Beatnik Glory
• How I Met Ginsberg
All Articles From 1997

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 1996
• Arthur Rimbaud
• Jane Bowles
• d. a. levy
All Articles From 1996

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 1995
• Charles Bukowski
• Paul Bowles
• My Audition for On The Road
All Articles From 1995

FEATURED ARTICLES FROM 1994
• The Beat Generation
• Jack Kerouac
• Allen Ginsberg
All Articles From 1994

About LitKicks

Literary Kicks was born on July 23, 1994. Here's a page about who we are and where we've been.

Africa
African-American
American
Arabic
Audio Literature
Awards
Beat Generation
Being A Writer
Big Thinking
Biography
Bookselling
Breakfast Club
British
Classics
Comedy
Comix
Drama
Eastern
Eastern European
Ecology
Economics
Events
Existential
Fantasy
Fiction
Film
French
Haiku
Harlem Renaissance
Hiphop
History
Indie
Internet Culture
Interviews
Jazz Age
Jewish
Kid Lit
La Boheme
Language
Latin
Lists
Lit-Crit
LitKicks
Love
Memes
Modernism
Music
Mystery
National Poetry Month
Nature
New York City
News
Overrated Writers
Personal
Places
Poetry
Poetry Readings
Poker
Politics
Polls and Questions
Postmodernism
Psychology
Publishing
Reading
Religion
Reviews
Romantic
Russian
Science Fiction
Southern
Spoken Word
Sports
Summer Of Love
Technology
Television
The Memoir
Transcendentalism
Transgressive
Tributes
Uncategorized
Victorian
Visual Art
What Are You Reading
Women

This is Marriage? The Beat Generation and Gregory Corso’s ‘Marriage’

by Sarah Duff on Monday, April 22, 2002 06:03 am
Beat Generation, Love, Poetry
Gregory Corso's poem "Marriage" is an expression of the poet's disgust with the concept of marriage as a (predominantly middle class) institution. It also displays how the poet's battles between conforming and subverting the entire process. And yet beyond this, his intention is serious: he is searching for some ideal which will allow him the happiness that a conventional marriage would not.

John Clellon Holmes wrote in the early 50's:

"for today's young people there is not a single external pivot around which they can, as a generation, group their observations and their aspirations. There is no single philosophy, no single party, no single attitude. The failure of most orthodox moral and social concepts to reflect fully the life they have known is probably the reason for this."

The Beat Generation lost faith in the structures of ordered American society. As a postwar generation, they believed that these organizations had failed in both preventing the confusion and upheaval of war, but had also not been able to adapt to a world enormously affected by the conflict. In "Marriage", published in 1959, Corso launches an attack on the convention of marriage. He does so by looking at wedlock through three different perspectives: from that of the working, middle and upper class.

The two extremes of wealth (the immigrant family and the sophisticates) are cleverly juxtaposed. Both groups live in apartments in New York City, but they experience the city entirely differently. For the immigrant family it is "hot smelly tight New York City / seven flights up roaches and rats in the walls" and the wealthy "lived high up in a penthouse with a huge window / from which we could see all of New York and farther on clearer days". Even the speaker's wives are compared. The immigrant wife is enormous and fertile with the violence, noise and strong will one associates with the image of "a fat Reichian wife screeching over potatoes", whereas her counterpart is "beautiful sophisticated / tall and pale". Unlike the first wife, she has no children; there is an air of sterility and coldness to her. What unites these two images are two factors; firstly, they are both caricatures of immigrant life and high society. Secondly, and more importantly, neither portrayal of marriage is deemed satisfactory. In the first case the poet says that it is "impossible to lie back and dream" and the other is a "pleasant prison dream". Marriage does not fulfill him in a spiritual sense.

Corso focuses his greatest energies on the middle class. He meticulously describes each stage of a young couple's life together to illustrate to what extent marriage is ritualised and subordinate to the bourgeois need for appearing respectable. During courtship they limit their behaviour to the boundaries imposed by society, "and she going just so far and I understanding why", when he meets her parents they make cliched comments, "we're losing a daughter / but we're gaining a son", the priest's words, "Do you take this woman as your lawful wedded wife?" underline the sense of tradition and the importance of it being lawful or socially acceptable. Even the honeymoon is taken at a conventional spot: Niagara Falls (34) is a favoured site for honeymooners in America. Moving on to early married life, his wife stays at home while he goes out to work and desires nothing more than to be the mother of his children. This paternalist attitude towards woman (as helpless beings whose sole aim in life should be to please their husbands) was typical of conservative middle class America.

How nice it'd be to come home to her
and sit by the fireplace and she in the kitchen
aproned young and lovely wanting my baby
and so happy about me she burns the roast beef
and comes crying to me and I get up from my big papa chair
(51-55)

Finally, their first child is born. They, in a sense, satisfy the demands of their society: they are married and now they have a family.

However, throughout this journey, it is clear that the speaker is dissatisfied. Through his embarrassment (such as when he cannot ask to go to the bathroom (13)), his anger or irritation at the behaviour of the people at Niagara Falls,

The lobby zombies they knowing what
The whistling elevator man he knowing
The winking bellboy knowing
Everybody knowing! I'd be almost inclined not to do anything!
Stay up all night! Stare that hotel clerk in the eye!
Screaming: I deny honeymoon! I deny honeymoon!
(38-43)
and his absurd fantasies about upsetting middle tradition,

running rampant into those almost climactic suites
yelling Radio belly! Cat shovel!
O I'd live in Niagara forever! in a dark cave beneath the Falls
I'd sit there the Mad Honeymooner
devising ways to break up marriages, a scourge of bigamy
a saint of divorce"

the speaker implies that he cannot accept this conventionalized form of marriage. These devices show up how ridiculous this ritual is: there is not spontaneity because all actions have been predetermined and there is no love, as love is forced to conform to what is socially allowed.

What is also very effective is the poet's references to symbols of American life: the "velvet suit and faustus hood", cemeteries, werewolves and zombies bring to mind the B-grade horror movies so popular during the 1950s and 1960s; Flash Gordon and Batman were popular comic book heroes; the golf clubs, lawnmower, picket fence and Community Chest are synonymous with suburban life and Blue Cross Gas & Columbus were suppliers of gas and appliances for household use. The implication created by these concepts is that marriage is rather like a pre-packaged commodity; like tickets to a film, comic books, a house in the suburbs or furniture it is an experience that one buys into and does not create. It is so much part of middle class society that it no longer exists as an expression of love or devotion. Thus, as an institution, the speaker is entirely disillusioned with marriage.

Holmes admits that "it is certainly a generation of extremes". He goes on to say that with this disenchantment with society and the desire to reform it, the Beat Generation were challenged by the tension existing between finding comfort and security in conformity or in excess. In Corso's work, according to Carolyn Gaiser, "one finds the recurring embodiment of the Dionysian force of emotion and spontaneity, as opposed to the Apollonian powers of order, clarity and moderation.

This Nietzschian conflict is present in "Marriage". The speaker repeatedly asserts that he "should" marry. Even though the dictionary meaning of "should" is that the word is "used to indicate obligation, duty or correctness", in context, "should" is a suggestion, rather than an order (as in "must"), it carries no real obligation. This ambivalence introduces conflict. The speaker feels that it is better to marry and, hence, to be "good", but he has no real compulsion to do so, in which case, he is at liberty to play with the norms and conventions of marriage.

For example, in the first stanza, Corso mixes conformity (the rituals of courtship) with excess (the horror genre). In the first few lines, conventional courtship is alluded to with the girl next door (the archetypical, suitable middle class girl) and "take her to the movies" (the usual destination for courting couples). Subverting this are "velvet suit and faustus hood" (these items are unconventional or bohemian and would be considered inappropriate in conservative thinking) and "cemeteries" (an extremely unorthodox spot for a courting couple). In a way, the other references to death and fantasy (the werewolf and tombstone) evoke the darker side of bourgeois society (the werewolf is an apt metaphor: man by day, monster by night). Due to the fact that they have been suppressed and effectively pushed out of the ritual that marriage has become, passion and "desire" are part of this hidden aspect of mid dle class being. Hence, the speaker is feels that he should conform to convention when courting, but he is pulled into the direction of what the establishment labels "excess": passion, desire, sex, uncontrollable emotion and love.

Another example is,

So much to do! like sneaking into Mr Jones' house late at night
and cover his golf clubs with 1920 Norwegian books
Like hanging a picture of Rimbaud on the lawnmower
like pasting Tannu Tuva postage stamps all over the picket fence
like when Mrs Kindhead comes to collect for the Community Chest
grab her and tell her There are unfavourable omens in the sky!
And when the mayor comes to get my vote tell him
When are you going to stop people killing whales!
And when the milkman comes leave him a note in the bottle
Penguin dust, bring me penguin dust, I want penguin dust

In a series of fantasies, the speaker takes a metaphor for middle class life and subverts it. Firstly, "Mr. Jones" is the archetypal suburban neighbor who would not approve of someone "sneaking into [his] house late at night" to perform mischief. His golf clubs and lawnmower are also symbols of suburbia, whereas the "1920 Norwegian books" and portrait of Rimbaud would be more in place in the home of an academic or intellectual -- someone whom Mr Jones may consider to be a threat to his way of thinking. The stamps from Tannu Tuva on the picket fence (once again, a symbol of the American middle class dream) indicate the limitations of bourgeois thinking: they never think beyond their picket fences; their thought is parochial. The stamps challenge this confinement; they suggest what is beyond these self-imposed borders. These first few acts of subversion highlight the narrow boundaries of the middle class life; the books, portrait and stamps represent not only that which lies beyond those boundaries, but they confront and also subvert these limits. Dionysus dares Apollo.

This is further dealt with in the second section of the stanza. Here, the middle classes are represented by "Mrs Kindhead collect[ing] for the Community Chest", "the mayor com[ing] to get [his] vote" and "the milkman". The Community Chest, mayor and milkman are all illustrative of traditional social structures: the Community Chest is a charity organisation who distributes money given by (mainly) middle class people to the poor, the mayor is symbolic of the political organisation of society and the milkman is a common aspect of suburban dwelling. In subverting these elements, the speaker descends into what would be considered "mad" behavior: his actions are not appropriate to the circumstances. Again Dionysus comes face to face with Apollo, but because this subversion is not done secretively, by sneaking into a neighbor's house, they have more of a feeling of the "excess" so assiduously avoided by the bourgeois. The tension between conformity and excess continues, whether quietly or out in the open. This Beat Generation issue is brought into the poem; as a member of the Generation, the speaker is torn between either having the appearance of conforming and in a clandestine manner upsetting middle class life or blatantly and loudly challenging it.

However, as Holmes writes,

For beneath the excess and the conformity, There are the stirrings of a quest. What the [Beat Generation] is looking for is a feeling of somewhereness what [it] wants is a stable position from which to operate. [They] have had enough of homelessness, valuelessness, faithlessness.

Without a base of secure values to work from, the Beat Generation developed a need to create or to find something to believe in. As Kerouac explained, "I was waiting for God to show his face". Only once faith is found can this disillusionment and tension be resolved. Corso introduces this idea of a quest in the eleventh stanza with, "O but what about love? I forget love". At once, the poem is serious. Love is offered as hope; the ideal for which he can strive. It is the answer to his disgust of the marriage institution, but it is not easily found.

I never wanted to marry a girl who was like my mother
And Ingrid Bergman was always impossible
And there's maybe a girl now but she's already married
And I don't like men

There is a true sense of rising panic and worry with his repetition of "And" at the beginning of lines 103, 104 and 105. It reaches a climax with:

but there's got to be somebody!
Because what if I'm 60 years old and not married,
all alone in a furnished room with pee stains on my underwear
and everybody else is married! All the universe married but me!
(105-108)

The speaker envisages a lonely and rather pathetic future as the reality of his situation becomes clear to him. Only by finding love (the ideal) will his happiness be secured.

All this discussion is an exploration of Corso and his generation's question (with a nod to Holmes): is this marriage? From his original rejection of the conventions of marriage, its ritualised nature and its inability to satisfy him spiritually and accommodate his views, attitudes and thinking, the speaker moves to having to balance his desire to conform whilst still wanting to subvert the system. Yet, beyond all this, he realises that the solution for his disillusionment (the faith he needs to believe in) is love and love must be sought. There is a definite and determined progression in this process: the speaker does not remain mired in cynicism or devilish fantasising. As Holmes concludes,

But [the Beat Generation's] ability to keep its eyes open, and yet avoid cynicism; its ever-increasing conviction that the problem of modern life is essentially a spiritual problem; and that capacity for sudden wisdom are assets and bear watching.
(par. 17)

This thought proved prophetic. The Beat poets and writers have become a respected and popular inclusion in the canon of western literature. Indeed, Corso's "Marriage" is one such example. Despite effectively embodying the tenets and spirit of the Beat Movement, the poem has another side to it which places it (somewhat ironically) beyond the limits of Beat literature. I feel that it is possibly this that has ensured the work's continuing popularity, as compared to other Beat poetry which is best understood within its context. This "something else" is Corso's characteristic, almost childlike, sense of fun. In 1961, Carolyn Gaiser wrote, "The mask that is most distinctly Gregory Corso's [is] that of the sophisticated child". This comes across best at the end of the poem where the speaker, seriously anxious about his future, switches from serious contemplation to the child's fantasy of a beautiful woman waiting for her rescuer. This turnabout rescues the poem from becoming oppressively heavy or oppressive. It allows it a timelessness; the humour appeals to people living forty years after the poem's publication.

In 1996, just five years before the poet's death, Iain Sinclair wrote an article about an aging Corso for The London Review of Books. He begins the article with: "There may be only two writers, currently at work in America, who can bring themselves, unblushing, to use the phrase 'drinky poo.'" Of course, Gregory Corso is one of them. This ability to use speak childlike nonsense whilst being fully aware of one's enormous poetic talent is what imbues "Marriage" with its capacity to translate to a wide, and varied, audience, regardless of the poem's Beat Generation context.

Bookmark and Share
EXPLORE RELATED ARTICLES
The Beat Generation
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
William S. Burroughs

Action Poetry

Nine years old and running, Action Poetry is an open forum for sharing original poems.

ninety-six magnavox by hypcollector
That Guy In The Corner Room by nerdgirl
Haiku on War by tortilla

Litkicks Says "Occupy!"

• When Wall Street Occupied Me
• Occupy Wall Street: How the People's Mic Works
• Occupy Wall Street: In Search of Honest Capitalism
• Adbusters: The Zine That Created the Occupy Movement
• How a Protest Survives
• Why the Tea Party and Occupy Should Protest Together

and ...

• Occupy Your Mind: A Litkicks Digital Library

Search

On This Date

... in 2006
Now I Ain’t Sayin’ She’s a Page Turner by Caryn Thurman

... in 2006
Way Overdue by Caryn Thurman

... in 2006
Indie Writer on Exile Island by Levi Asher

... in 2007
Love and Theft and Ted and Alice by Levi Asher

... in 2008
Reviewing the Review: February 10 2008 by Levi Asher

... in 2010
Pondering Proust IIIb: More On Guermantes Way by Michael Norris

... in 2011
Writing the Antihero: Zuckerberg and the Social Network by Dedi Felman

Twitter

Follow Levi Asher on Twitter: @asheresque

By Author

FEATURED ARTICLES BY ALAN BISBORT
• Beatniks: How I Wrote A Subculture Guidebook
• Baseball: The Great American Literary Sport
• Written In Prison
All Articles By Alan Bisbort

FEATURED ARTICLES BY MICHAEL NORRIS
• Francoise Sagan: Sex, Drugs and Literature
• Marcel Proust: Beyond the Madeleines
• Capitaine Achab
All Articles By Michael Norris

FEATURED ARTICLES BY LEVI ASHER
• The Beat Generation
• In Gatsby's Tracks: Locating the Valley of Ashes in a 1924 Photo
• FINDING THE INTERNET
All Articles By Levi Asher

FEATURED ARTICLES BY JAMELAH EARLE
• For Sale: Baby Shoes, Never Worn.
• Jonathan Swift and Lady Montagu: an 18th Century Literary Smackdown
• Villanelles, Sonnets and Meter
All Articles By Jamelah Earle

FEATURED ARTICLES BY BILL ECTRIC
• Samuel Taylor Coleridge
• The Mary Shelley Story
• Metafiction and the 4th Wall
All Articles By Bill Ectric

FEATURED ARTICLES BY DEDI FELMAN
• Enter Sandman: Neil Gaiman at PEN World Voices
• Adaptations: A PEN World Voices 2010 Conversation About Literature and Film
• Herta Who?
All Articles By Dedi Felman

FEATURED ARTICLES BY GARRETT KENYON
• The Top Ten Crime and Mystery Novels of 2009
• The Big Dime: Ten Best Crime Novels of the Past Year
• Advancing the Darkness: Five Modern Masters of Mystery and Crime
All Articles By Garrett Kenyon

FEATURED ARTICLES BY CLAUDIA MOSCOVICI
• The Conformism of Postmodern Style
• Fiction and Cultural Memory: Writing From Ceausescu's Romania
• An Unlikely Cocktail: Mixing Pop and Bourbon in the Palace of Versailles
All Articles By Claudia Moscovici

ALL AUTHORS

Original Books from Literary Kicks!

Beats In Time: Literary Kicks Covers the Beat Generation, 1994-2005

SEE ALL LITKICKS PUBLICATIONS

Featured Articles

The Reading Room

Enter Sandman: Neil Gaiman at PEN World Voices

Literature's Final Table: An Imaginary Poker Match

Richard Brautigan

Popular Articles

MOST READ THIS YEAR

• Philosophy Weekend: Why Ayn Rand Is Wrong (and Why It Matters)
• Occupy Wall Street: How the People's Mic Works
• Announcing ... Literary Kicks Books for Kindle
• Philosophy Weekend: Nicholson Baker's Case for Pacifism

MOST COMMENTED THIS MONTH

• Philosophy Weekend: What is Wealth, and Why Shouldn't We Talk About It?
• Philosophy Weekend: Why Ayn Rand Is Still Wrong
• Philosophy Weekend: Does Ultimate Evil Exist?
• Philosophy Weekend: Where This Is Heading

Feed

RSS

 

Literary Kicks • About Us