When something is "on the verge" of something, it's almost reaching that level - similar to saying "on the edge". "On the verge of coherence" means it could almost be understood. When you hear people murmuring, you can't really understand the words, but if it "trembled on the verge of coherence" you could almost make out the words, but not quite.
It's another metaphor like the lawn that ran up the beach - it's written to evoke the feeling of waves in the ocean.
You're going to encounter a lot of interesting English in The Great Gatsby! F. Scott Fitzgerald was the quintessential American writer of the 1920s, and that was the same time period that American English Slang and popular culture really exploded.