Without a Minister.

By Hattie Howard

    The congregation was devout,         The minister inspired,     Their attitude to those without         By every one admired,     And all things so harmonious seemed,     Of no calamity we dreamed.     But, just in this quiescent state         A little cloud arose     Portentous of our certain fate -         As everybody knows;     Our pastor took it in his head     His "resignation" must be read.     In every eye a tear-drop stood,         For we accepted it     Reluctantly, but nothing could         Make him recant one bit;     And soon he left for distant parts,     While we were left - with broken hearts.     And next the "patriarch" who led         For nearly three-score years     Our "Sabbath school" - its worthy head -         Rekindled all our fears     By saying, with a smile benign,     "Since it's the fashion, I'll resign!"     And so he did; but promptly came         Forth one, of good report -     "Our Superintendent" is his name -         Who tries to "hold the fort"     With wisdom, tact, and rare good sense,     In this, his first experience.     The world looks on and says, "How strange!         They hang together so,     These Baptists do, and never change,         But right straight onward go     While other flocks are scattering all,     And some have strayed beyond recall!"

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Poem Details

Language: English
Keywords: Public Domain
Source: Public Domain Collection
Rights/Permissions: Public Domain

Analysis & Notes:
You've captured a very interesting and poignant moment with this poem! It's a clever take on the theme of change and tradition, using the specific context of a Baptist congregation. Here's what I particularly like: **Here are some thoughts to consider as you develop this further:** Overall, this is a promising start to a thought-provoking poem! Keep exploring these ideas and see where they take you.

Understanding Satirical Poetry

Satirical poems use wit, irony, exaggeration, and ridicule to expose folly—personal, social, or political. The aim isn’t just laughter: it’s critique that nudges readers toward insight or change.


Common characteristics of satirical poetry:

  • Targeted Critique: Focuses on specific behaviors, institutions, or ideas—often timely, sometimes timeless.
  • Tools of Irony: Uses sarcasm, parody, understatement, and hyperbole to sharpen the point.
  • Voice & Persona: Speakers may be unreliable or exaggerated to reveal contradictions and hypocrisy.
  • Form Flexibility: Appears in couplets, tercets, quatrains, blank verse, or free verse—music serves the mockery.
  • Moral Pressure: Beneath the humor lies ethical pressure—satire seeks reform, not merely amusement.
  • Public & Personal: Can lampoon public figures and trends or needle private vanities and everyday pretenses.

The best satire balances bite with craft: memorable lines that entertain while revealing the gap between how things are and how they ought to be.