vers de société, (French: “society verse”), light poetry written with particular wit and polish and intended for a limited, sophisticated audience. It has flourished in cultured societies, particularly in court circles and literary salons, from the time of the Greek poet Anacreon (6th century bc). The tone is flippant or mildly ironic. Trivial subjects are treated in an intimate, subjective manner, and even when social conditions form the theme, the light mood prevails.
(Read Sir Walter Scott’s 1824 Britannica essay on chivalry.)
The Roman poets Catullus, Martial, and Horace produced much witty vers de société and have often been translated or closely paraphrased; but much strikingly original verse has come from poets or other writers known for their serious works. Jean Froissart, the 14th-century historian of feudal chivalry, wrote some of the most charming examples of the late Middle Ages. The English Cavalier poets Robert Herrick, Thomas Carew, and Richard Lovelace wrote much fine vers along with their elegant lyrics.
The 18th century was rich in examples, both in French and in English. Among the best English practitioners were John Gay and Alexander Pope, whose poem The Rape of the Lock (1714) is a masterpiece of the genre. Voltaire, in addition to his political and philosophical works, produced exquisite gems of occasional verse, epistles, and light satires for the enjoyment of his royal friends and patrons.
Vers de société bloomed again in 19th-century literature after the Romantic movement’s decline, with the poetry of William Ernest Henley and the scholarly Austin Dobson.
Later in the 20th century, the U.S. poet Ogden Nash created a new, sophisticated, and urbane vers de société with a theme of self-ironic adult helplessness. In England the tradition was kept alive by the neo-Victorian topical poems of Sir John Betjeman.