Dale Hurst – Author - Dale Hurst is an author, journalist and broadcaster.
  • Home
  • About Dale Hurst
  • Buy My Books
  • Blog
  • Podcast – The Dale Hurst Writing Show
Home
About Dale Hurst
Buy My Books
Blog
Podcast – The Dale Hurst Writing Show
Dale Hurst – Author - Dale Hurst is an author, journalist and broadcaster.
  • Home
  • About Dale Hurst
  • Buy My Books
  • Blog
    • Lust & Liberty
    • Sin & Secrecy
    • You Can Hear Chopin
    • Short Fiction
    • Poetry
  • Podcast
    • Season 4
    • Bournemouth Writing Festival 2024
    • Season 3
    • Season 2
    • Season 1
  • Get in touch
Browsing Tag
charles dickens
Poetry

Behind the Writing: “A Modern Wasteland”

17 November 2020 No Comments

Dipped back into poetry for a spell. What started as a uni task turned into something that inspired a full story…

Some of you may have come here by way of Instagram or Facebook, and if that’s the case, then great! Either way, you probably know I’m not normally one for poetry. I was once upon a time, when it was the only real creative writing you got to do in school. But after GCSE English, I was so focused on writing the Berylford books (plus I didn’t do English Literature at A-Level), my love and competence for poetry just vanished. Until now, where I present something I’m calling A Modern Wasteland.

A few weeks ago, as part of my Masters, I was required to read T.S. Eliot’s famous The Waste Land. To sum up a rather complex and important Modernist piece, it is a 434-line blending of various episodes of British society, cultural references and different languages. Furthermore, it is broken up into five sections, each with their own tones, narrators, themes and so on. I do actually urge poetry lovers to give it a go. Its deeper meanings might not be clear from the outset, but isn’t that half the fun? Anyway, we were asked to write versions of our own. And after writing the first segment GIVE NOT WHAT IS HOLY TO DOGS, I enjoyed it so much (and the feedback received), I decided to finish the remaining three.

A MODERN WASTELAND

I. GIVE NOT WHAT IS HOLY TO DOGS

Herein lies the lesson

That my father confirmed upon me

That no solace may be taken

In hapless acts of generosity

With the landscape mired in vagrancy

Aggressive begging and

The self-righteous shouting after

The lords and ladies of the land

Who oblige them with little less

Than the silent contempt they deem them due

But never resort to rehome their coins

Stay cold as they pass through.

Are there no prisons? No poorhouses?

The homeless should go there.

If they’d rather die, they’d better do it:

Their fate’s their own affair.

Confer upon them no funds:

No shilling, penny, or pound

For honour is rare in their intentions

Booze and drugs are what’s to be found.

Admittedly, not too many cultural references in there. Two, to be frank, and one is in the title of the segment. Give Not What is Holy to Dogs comes from The Sermon on the Mount — the only part of it that I actually know. And so the three lines that follow it form the titles for the succeeding segments of this poem. The other reference some may know if you’re big fans of Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. Three lines in there that are quite applicable to the attitudes towards the poor and homeless in the UK.

FUTURE

I’m likely to publish the remaining parts on my channels in due course. But the best thing to come out of this, apart from a renewed interest in poetry, is the decision to expand the entire storyline into a prose piece. More likely a short story or novel, rather than a Berylford Scandal-length novel. Tentatively titled Ode of a Godless Man, I may begin work on that in and around my continuation of You Can Hear Chopin from the Attic, and the projects I’ve committed to for uni.

For more author news and views, my Facebook, Twitter and Instagram pages are here.

Continue reading
Reading time: 2 min
Written by: Dale Hurst
Sin & Secrecy

PODCAST: Berylford Backchat

10 July 2020 No Comments

Surprise! Had this under wraps for a couple of weeks, and can now unveil this special, one-off podcast, which is something of a cross between an interrogation and a roast…

I don’t know what I was expecting when I offered my podcasting cohorts James Boxall and Aaron Hayes the chance to interview me about the new book. Well… the results are here now for you to listen to at your pleasure. It’s a 50-something minute programme in which I am roasted and interrogated about Sin & Secrecy, The Berylford Scandals as a series, plus my plans for future projects and my thoughts on writing in general.

SPOILER ALERT!

Just to make sure you’re aware, there are spoilers in this programme, pretty much from the get-go. But also exclusive previews (in my voice). And in case any younger people happen to be nearby when listening, this podcast contains controversial opinions, moderate language and sexual references.

 For more author news and views, my Facebook, Twitter and Instagram pages are here.

Continue reading
Reading time: 1 min
Written by: Dale Hurst
Page 2 of 6«1234»...Last »

About me

Dale Hurst is an author specialising in historical fiction, mystery, crime and black comedy.

Popular Posts

ANNOUNCEMENT: New Book in Progress

15 November 2018

No Time Like the Present…

1 July 2018

“To Err is Human…”

4 August 2018

You Can Hear Chopin from the Attic: A Brief Overview

24 January 2019

Categories

  • Ballad of a Godless Man
  • Blog
  • Characters
  • Food Writing
  • Journalism
  • Lifestyle
  • Lust & Liberty
  • Podcast
  • Poetry
  • Short Fiction
  • Sin & Secrecy
  • Travels
  • Writing
  • You Can Hear Chopin

Dale Hurst

  • About Dale Hurst
  • Get in touch

Recent Posts

  • Silhouettes – all you need to know
  • Progress Report — February/March 2025
  • Progress Report — January 2025
  • Progress Report — December 2024
  • Progress Report — November 2024

Dale Hurst

  • Email
    dale.hurst93@gmail.com
  • Address
    Poole, Dorset
© 2020 Copyright Dale Hurst // All rights reserved