“Wit with a purpose—irony, parody, and pointed critique in verse.”
| Title | Author | Type of Poem |
|---|---|---|
| The Sorrows Of A Simple Bard | Henry Lawson | Satirical |
| The Stethoscope Song - A Professional Ballad | Oliver Wendell Holmes | Satirical |
| The Surgeon's Warning. | Robert Southey | Satirical |
| The Sweet Little Man | Oliver Wendell Holmes | Satirical |
| The Tombstone-Maker | Siegfried Loraine Sassoon | Satirical |
| The Translator. | Alexander Pope | Satirical |
| The Triumphs Of Farce | Thomas Moore | Satirical |
| The Twa Herds: Or, The Holy Tulzie | Robert Burns | Satirical |
| The Twins | Robert William Service | Satirical |
| The Vote Of Thanks Debate | Henry Lawson | Satirical |
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:
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.