In Conversation with Niamh Boyce, Irish author of the Herbalist, Her Kind and Inside the Wolf

In Conversation

Niamh Boyce is an award winning writer and poet from Ireland who is based in the Irish Midlands. Using the novel and poem to unearth the witches, ghosts and other buried voices of marginalised Irish women, her writing frequently explores womanhood and the oppressive influence of the Catholic religion and patriarchy on women’s lives. In 2012, she was awarded the Hennessy XO New Irish Writer of the Year for her poem “Kitty” and later went on to publish her first poetry collection, Inside the Wolf (2018), in which she dissects traditional fairy tales to explore art, motherhood and her Irish ancestry. Boyce’s debut novel, The Herbalist was published in 2013, gaining her Newcomer of the Year at the Irish Book Awards the same year. Set in 1930 rural Ireland, it tells the story of how the arrival of a mysterious medicine man to a small Irish village impacts the lives of four women within the community and exposes the culture of shame and silence which oppresses them. In 2019, Her Kind was published and shortlisted for the EU Prize for Literature. Taking the title from the Anne Sexton poem, the novel provides a speculative account of the Kilkenny Witch Trial which saw a group of Irish women condemned for witchcraft in 1324. In this interview, Lyonesse Editor Sam Young and Niamh discuss some of her feminist literary influences, the enduring allure of myths folklore and fairy tales, and giving voice to the historically silenced women of Ireland’s turbulent past.

Niamh Boyce. Copyright Miguel Ruiz

In our Literary Lyonesses section, we give thanks to the women writers of the past and acknowledge how their writing helped to shape the future of women’s literature. If we were to take a rummage through your bookshelves, which books by literary lyonesses would we find?

Adrienne Rich’s Of Woman Born is one. My copy is twenty-eight years old, and I love reading what younger-me underlined, and scribbled in the margins. I don’t write on novels, but treat non-fiction books like a conversation and I highlight, underline, and sometimes argue back in the margins. Of Woman Born blew my mind, it was the first feminist work I read – there weren’t many in my local bookshop, and those were pre-internet days. I was pregnant and in my first year of college, and went into labour during my English exam writing an essay on Rich’s poetry… so all those things combined made for a potent relationship with the book! There was a definite feeling of awakening. Many of the books still on my shelves are by writers I first came across at that time. They’ve become talismanic over the years. These include Beloved by Toni Morrison, The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing, In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens by Alice Walker, The Madwoman in the Attic by Gilbert and Gubar, The Second Sex by Beauvoir. There was also The Passion of New Eve by Angela Carter, a mad, brilliant and imaginative book that I’ve re-read many times. There’s no one quite like Carter!  

At Lyonesse we are also committed to championing the work of contemporary women writers. Which of your contemporaries do you particularly admire and enjoy reading?

Pond by Marie Claire Bennet is amazing, one of those ‘nothing happens but everything happens’ books. It’s told from the point of view of a woman living in isolation in rural Ireland. It’s an intense enlivening read that has been marketed as a short story collection in some countries and as a novel in others, but it’s just itself, just Pond.  Doireann Ni Ghriofa’s A Ghost in the Throat is a treasure, a pleasure, a joy – a hybrid work that weaves autofiction, essay, history, poetry, mystery. Its narrator is obsessed with the poet Eibhlín Dubh Ní Chonail. I love the author’s descriptions of breast feeding, of housework, the rhythm of her honest poetic style – ‘This is a female text’ the author tells us, and it certainly is, and one that nourishes and inspires.

Ireland has an extremely rich heritage of myth, folklore and fairy tale which is rooted in the oral tradition of storytelling. How do you think this heritage and tradition has informed your own writing?

The Irish myths I learned at school were the tales of the warrior class, heroes like Setanta, and Fionn Mac Cumhail. In these retellings, which came with vivid illustrations, women were depicted as pawns, if depicted at all – with the exception of Niamh from “Tir Na N’Og” (“The Land of the Young”). Of course, there are many vital strong women in Irish myth – Aine, Macha, Morrigan, Queen Maeve for a start, but I have no memory of them featuring in the stories we were told. I visited Queen Maeve’s Cairn in Sligo a few years after leaving school, and got some inkling of how much more there was to the Irish mythology. Legend has it that Maeve was buried standing up, spear in hand, facing Ulster. Built 5,000 years ago, her cairn can be seen for miles. Reading the land can be more enlightening than any book! I love lore relating to land and liminality – caves, forests, hawthorns, witching hour. Setting is really important in my fiction. I spent a lot of time in Kilkenny, walking the routes my characters walked, while writing about the medieval witchcraft trial of Alice Kyteler. Many of the scenes were written on the site where they played out. I love to tap into the atmosphere of a place, touch the old stones, walk the ancient steps… The same went for The Herbalist, I took notes by the river, down the alley where the herbalist lived, and in the square where he sold his potions to the women of the town. There was a lot of folklore around that trial, and I grew up hearing snippets. I love kitchen sink folklore – those half-heard stories, advice and warnings. I find folklore endlessly fascinating, more so than mythology. Give me talk of charms, superstitions and taboos over a grand battle any day! Sean O Sullivan’s A Handbook of Irish Folklore reveals reams of traditions and charms around birth and death – from superstitions about the caul to the omen of a bird entering your house. Duchas.ie is another amazing resource. There’s such poetry in the rituals recounted in the Irish Folklore Collection – the cross in the soda bread, the warning whispered before a basin of water is emptied out the window, a dream coming ‘out’, the red ribbon around a baby’s wrist. I think my preference definitely relates to class and gender. The oral tale, with its unpinned and changeable nature also reveals more about the ordinary people, than the recorded, sanctioned story. When I want to find out about a place or people, I turn to folklore, the songs, the lore, the rhymes, the crimes – there’s where I feel the root is, the testimony I’m interested in. I go on to read the bigger picture, the ‘official’ history too of course, but feel that folklore is the level closest to that lie that holds the truth.    

Inside the Wolf, 2018

In your poetry collection, Inside the Wolf you take traditional fairy tales and breathe new life into them. What attracted you to the process of rewriting fairy tales? And why do you think fairy tales continue to be so powerfully alluring?

Allure is the perfect word. Their lure is very strong for me, there is so much to love, the transformations, the strange creatures, the dark forests, the drops of blood on snow, the wolf waiting behind the tree… but I think the lasting nature of the allure might be due to the circumstances around their retelling. I heard these stories over and over as a very young child, lying in bed, just before going to sleep.  Most likely, they seeped into my dreams and played out there too. There’s something magical about being read to, about closing your eyes and hearing the words, and seeing the tale unravel, your version of the wolf, the forest, the grandmother, the girl. It’s possible that the fairy tale characters and their stories became interwoven with my own concerns and battles in my dream world as a child and became ‘charged’ for me at that early stage. Another source of their power lies in their oral origins, they were crafted to be remembered and recited. They rhyme in so many ways – the repetition of phrases, of plot elements, colour, symbols, the use of three – they are simple stories, easily held in the mind, and full of refrains we love to repeat – What big eyes you have grandmother? And he huffed and he puffed and he blew the house down.  Run, run, as fast as you can, you can’t catch me I am the ginger bread man. I don’t think I’ve encountered stories in such a potent way since. My writing is a way of re-entering these tales and working out traumas or questions of identity, or subverting expectations within a pre-made, familiar story-scape. The characters and stories are already highly charged, as I mentioned earlier, which makes them very potent.  

There are various references to mythical and folkloric women, such as witches, mermaids in your poems. Who is your favourite mythical woman and why is she appealing?

I went mad for mermaids a few years ago. In fact, when I was pregnant, I even went through a phase of painting heavily pregnant merwomen that I sold in the Galway Market. They were lusty, roundy creatures rather than delicate Pre-Raphaelite sirens. I craved fish and wrote poems and stories about underwater women. I might have gone a little mad, but it was a very creative time! Writing poems on scraps of paper, painting on everything that didn’t move. I spent a lot of time at the sea shore. I began writing from the point of view of a selkie and it grew into one of my first short stories. Around that time, I got a letter in the post. One of my paintings had ended up in the possession of a man who lived on an island not too far away. It was a very, very long letter – maybe fifteen pages, and he said he loved the painting, and that he was in fact a descendent of a Melusine mermaid himself. It was very surreal. The figure of the mermaid felt so powerful in those days. It might have been the notion of a tribe of women who lived beneath the sea, an underwater sisterhood… but there was more, I associated them with preverbal knowledge. I don’t have the words to explain it, just to say that mermaids gave me a certain feeling, an irresistible urge to create. The way the tide is tugged by the moon.

Is there a specific myth, folk or fairy tale which you are repeatedly drawn back to or constantly creeps its way into your work?

Little Red and the Wolf. I love the various motifs and elements of that tale, the red hood (added by Perrault, so not in the original tale), the fact that the main character is a girl, moving between her mother’s house and her grandmother’s house, and of course the figure of the wolf. Its creeps into my poetry on a regular basis – it’s so ripe for subversion. Catherine Orenstein’s powerful study Little Red Riding Hood Uncloaked is an inspiring read on many aspects of the tale.

The wolf and the threat of being attacked by wolves is a motif which reoccurs in your writing. What does the wolf represent? And how does it relate to the women characters within your poems and novels?

What the wolf represents changes from one piece of work to the other, from one phase of my life to another. In my poetry, it represents instinct, sex, transformation, rebirth. I love Kiki Smiths work ‘Lying with the Wolf,’ a sculpture in which a clean sleek fully formed woman steps from the belly of the wolf. The wolf is a matrix. In poems relating to the story of Red Riding Hood it represents the place where you are told not to go to but must enter anyway. The tale has that dream quality in which all the characters are aspects of yourself. It might sound strange, but in my poetry the wolf represents almost everything primal, except death. In the world of my second novel Her Kind, the wolves were a fact of life – Ireland was known as Wolf Land at one stage, and are a threat to the women in the novel. There’s a pivotal scene where mother and daughter are circled by a starving wolf, and the mother is about to cut her daughter’s throat rather than have her eaten alive by a wolf. This act drives a wedge between them.   

The Herbalist, 2013

Ireland has a dark and turbulent history which has been oppressive for all marginalised groups but particularly women, whose right to their own bodies have been repeatedly denied and controlled by the Church and the State. Set against the backdrop of 1930s rural Ireland your novel The Herbalist (2013) highlights some of these issues, exploring rape, victim shaming, the Magdalene Laundries. As an Irish woman and writer how have these issues shaped your writing? And, do you think things have changed sufficiently in Ireland or is still more work to be done?

This is difficult – I had to wrestle with this question – to ask it of myself and think awhile. To be honest, those issues come out in my writing despite my intentions, rather than because of them. I have made peace with that now, but when I began writing, I actually felt hijacked by my subject matter. What I mean by that, is that I never intended to write the books I did – when I began to write fiction, I was surprized to find that the world of my stories was in the past – where was that sexy edgy contemporary novel I sat down to write? When I first began to write I used the free writing method, just letting the words flow, seeing what came. Natalie Goldberg’s book, Writing the Bones was an influence. The voices that came were from women living in 1930’s Athy, and their stories circled around the arrival an Indian Herbalist. It was a real-life case; a trial I’d come across while archiving old newspapers years before, and forgotten about. The voices were stronger and more alive than anything else in my notebook. So, I gave in, ditched my attempts at an edgy contemporary thriller, and wrote The Herbalist. Looking back, it was a gift – a book that gave itself to me in the way some poems do. And once I accepted that I was writing it – it was a joy to write. Each woman in the book is pushing back against the rigid society of the time. My drive, I discovered – was working with voices that have been supressed or silenced, and mixing fact and fiction. I’m drawn to sex, power and justice. Part of writing is discovering what kind of writer you are, I guess.

My concerns are connected with the stranglehold the church/state in Ireland had on women and men in the country I grew up in, to the vividness of the misogyny, the sanctioned hatred and media witch trials of women like Joanne Hayes and Annie Murphy. I still remember sitting in my school uniform beside the radio and hearing that Anne Lovett, a fifteen year old girl, had died giving birth beside a grotto to the ‘Virgin’ Mary – the shock of that moment has never left me. The horror that I lived in a country where such a thing was possible, where such a thing was the tip of the iceberg. Paula Meehan wrote a very powerful poem about Anne Lovett’s death called “The Statue of the Virgin at Granard Speaks.” Almost thirty years later, in 2012 Savita Halappanavar died after being denied health care in a Galway hospital. Suffering from septicaemia and needing a termination, she was denied the procedure, the midwife saying, ‘this is a catholic country’. Savita died as a result. There were candlelit vigils, signs that said ‘Never Again.’ Change in the law eventually did happen, but only because of the huge work women put into campaigning. As Anne Enright said sat the launch of The Long Gaze Back (Sinead Gleeson’s anthology of stories by Irish women writers) – ‘it’s a double burden for women, not only do you have to suffer the discrimination, you have to put in all the fucking work to fix it.’  

Her Kind, 2019

The theme of witches and witchcraft is a topic which you explore in detail in your novel, Her Kind, described as a “vivid re-imagining of the events leading up to the Kilkenny Witch trial” that took place in Ireland in 1324. What attracted you to retell the story of Alice Kytler, Petronelle and Basila?

The Kytler witch trial was initially mentioned to me by Patricia Deevy from Penguin Ireland when she asked if I would consider writing a novel about Alice Kyteler. This was back in 2013, when Penguin published my first novel The Herbalist. I wasn’t attracted to the idea at first as I was in the middle of another story and the Kytler trial felt a little too familiar to be interesting, the way local things often seem unexotic. However, after a while, I was curious and started to research a little. I soon discovered that I didn’t know the full story at all…Soon after, Petronella came into a poem I was writing. I still wasn’t committed to exploring the story in the form of a novel, but she was beginning to intrigue me more and more. What spurred me on, to be completely honest, was a video aimed at tourists in Kilkenny Cathedral. It was a screen placed beside Ledrede’s effigy. (Ledrede was the Bishop responsible for the witch trial.) An actor played the role of Ledrede, and told us the story of the evil witches, and that ‘pestiferous Petronella de Media.’ All these years later and his version was still the official one? That was enough. I opened the word document that night, titled it ‘Petronella.’ It became the novel Her Kind.     

Her Kind is a speculative historic account of women’s lives, whose stories has been manipulated as a result of attempts to erase them from mainstream historical narrative. How burdened did you feel when attempting to tell their story from subjective viewpoint?

Very. There are so many ways to tell a story, and when you’re about to begin, you make decisions that shapes the kind of story it will be. The Kilkenny Witchcraft trial had all the ingredients of a sensational piece of work – the bizarre accusations, the witch trial, the powerful figure of Alice Kyteler, and the bishop’s mania. Imaginatively potent, I looked forward to dramatizing those aspects with relish. But as I researched further, and discovered more about the case, in particular, Petronella De Media’s fate – I felt a responsibility to do her justice, and not to sensationalise her story. Hers was the voice I felt most obligation towards. The women in the case are defined by the accusations made against them still, by the words of Bishop Ledrede. Petronella’s ‘confession’, came from his pen, and was written in his voice. I decided early on, that I would have to write her story without glossing it over, or making it aesthetically pleasing – as is often done with women’s pain in fiction and film. I decided I couldn’t write the book unless I could write from her point of view, in a way that felt authentic. I began by writing the most difficult scenes first. I wrote many drafts and versions of those scenes. One day as I was writing, I read over the scene I had just finished, and I felt her say, ‘stop making it beautiful, it wasn’t beautiful.’ I rewrote, culling all flourishes. When her thread was written, I knew I could write the rest of the book.      

Jack Zipes describes the term witch as being “mimetically loaded.” Once used as a label to shame and oppress, it has since been re-appropriated by feminists as a term of empowerment. What does the term mean to you?

A lot of contemporary women are self-identifying as witches, reclaiming the term, and it means so many different things to different people doesn’t it? For some it’s primarily a way of accessing their own power and intuition, or becoming more connected to nature, or their own sensuality. It’s quite a fluid thing, not that easy to risk defining. Some work alone, and some in covens, formal and informal. The connection I have with my female friends feels coven like, more so as the years pass. I find the idea very exciting and empowering, especially in relation to creativity and feminism. More and more, I’m interested in magical thinking, in working with intuition over so called ‘logic’ – in dreamwork etc – I did a workshop recently with Alice Tarbuck on poetry and spells. Her book A Spell in the Wild is wonderful. We Were Witches by Ariel Gore, a book about being a single mother in the nineties is honest, powerful, and magical.

In Her Kind, silence manifests itself in various ways. Low social status enforces voicelessness upon the servants, Petronelle is forbidden to speak of her former Irish identity and Basila engages in a selective silencing of her choosing. Can you talk a little about how this theme of silence specifically relates to the women in the story and the process of telling their stories?

At an early stage, I knew what the last line of the novel proper would be, and that it would be Basilia who said it. (I don’t plot or plan the novels, but often know what the final image, or sentence is going to be, then I figure out how to get there.) When I had that sentence, instinct said it would be the first time Basilia spoke aloud. There would be a great weight then, to what she said. When you have no power, you have the power to withhold. So, muteness is a weapon Basilia uses – against her mother initially. It’s a way of punishing her. She keeps herself to herself, won’t speak, won’t share her dreams. As time passes, she becomes used to that silence, finds comfort in being peripheral for many of the people in Alice Kytler’s house, though not Alice. When I was writing these two characters, I was very aware that Irish was their first language. In the opening pages of the novel, they enter a town where Irish is not spoken. (The English colony of Hightown) Basilia’s muteness is related to this fact. They are Irish women living inside a walled town in their own country, a place where their own language and kind are outlawed. It is not somewhere Basilia can speak freely in her own tongue any way. And of course, the novel is written in English – as Irish is not my first language. I, myself, felt a certain muteness in relation to this 14th Gaelic girl and so the theme of silence is linked not only to their identity but to my own. When Petronelle surrenders their real names and language in exchange for the safety of the colonisers … she mistakes them for things that can be easily retrieved.       

What you are working on at the moment? Are there any topics which you are particularly keen to explore next?

I’ve been working on a novel called The Women for the past two years. It’s set in the 1850s, between Edinburgh and Ireland. It’s about writing, mediums, asylums, memory and the Irish famine. It weaves fact and fiction, as is inspired by the goings on in the life of Catherine Crowe, author and spiritualist, who wrote the game-changing book Nightside of Nature. It’s becoming much more fictional and fantastical than my previous novels, a little more fun – perhaps a response to the past year of lockdown.   

Leaping Leporidae: Hare and Rabbit Legends from around the World

Folklore & Fairy Tales

Rabbits and hares belong to the leporidae family of mammals which contains over 60 different species varieties. Identifiable by their elongated furry ears, large eyes, long hind legs and short forelegs, they are a sight to behold when seen hopping amongst forests, grasslands and meadows. In this feature which is accompanied by artist Monika Ruminska Akwarele’s stunning watercolour illustrations, Sam Young leaps into some of the stories associated with these remarkable creatures synonymous with springtime, revealing their stratospheric links to the moon, goddess and witchcraft connections and roles as tricksters in folkloric beliefs from around the world. 

Symbols of the Stratosphere

Around the globe, hares and rabbits appear hold esteemed positions in the stratosphere. First off, there’s the constellation Lepus (Latin for hare) which is said to depict a hare being pursued by the Greek hunter Orion and his pack of hunting dogs. Then there’s the fact that numerous symbolic connections have been made between hares, rabbits and the moon since the dawning of human civilisation. In Pagan beliefs spotting a moon-gazing hare is considered a sign of impending good fortune whilst in Canada, the Cree First Nation’s tribe tell a legend about an adventurous young rabbit who sought the help of a crane in order to fulfil his dreamt of riding upon the moon. Successful in his endeavour after much perseverance, it is said that if you cast your gaze upwards on the clearest of nights, you may still be able to spot him riding along on its crest. Though in Egyptian mythology the hare was viewed as gender fluid, androgynously leaping between genders in correspondence with the waxing and waning of the moon, far more legends associate hares with women – a detail which is believed to be the result of synchronicities between the 28 day duration of women’s menstrual cycle, a rabbits’ gestation period and length of a lunar moon. As a result much moon folklore has arisen which links hares to fertility, including the Chinese belief that female hares conceive by bathing in the glow of a full moon or lapping at moonlight from the fur of their male counterparts.

Image by Monika Ruminska Akwarele

The Moon Rabbit

Fascinatingly, a large number of legends which connect hares with the moon appear to have emerged as a result of lunar pareidolia, or the act of perceiving images amongst the patterns found on the moon’s surface. Whilst many Westerners typically claim to see a man in the moon, in many more countries around the world, including China, Japan and Mexico, it is believed that a specific area of the moon’s dark patches actually resemble a rabbit. Across Asia, moon-viewing festivals take place annually during autumn in honour of the moon and the Moon Rabbit or Jade Rabbit who is said to dwell there. Typically depicted pounding a pestle and mortar whose contents range from the elixir of immortality to the more humble rice or moon cakes and Japanese mochi (depending on the region or country it is told), legend states that the rabbit came to be etched on the moon’s surface as a result of it demonstrating great virtue and sacrificing itself on the behalf of humans. Told in the anthropomorphic tradition then, the rabbit appears to act as an animal stand-in for human morality. Although the story is believed to have originated in China it has spread across Asia and many alterative versions of this fable can also be found, including Tale 316 from the Indian Jakata Tales, which sees the hare become one of Buddha’s nonhuman incarnations. On the other side of the planet, remarkably similar tales also exist in the folklore of indigenous American cultures of Mesoamerica which likewise purport to rabbits being used or offering themselves up as sacrifices in creation stories of the sun and the moon.

Goddess Companions

Rabbits and hares also appear to have long been the companions of goddesses including some associated with some of the aforementioned lunar legends such as the Mayan moon goddess, Po, who is frequently depicted holding a rabbit and seated next to the waxing moon, and the Chinese lunar deity Chang’e, who resides over the moon as a result of stealing the elixir of immortality from her husband. During Anglo-Saxon times, hares were believed to have served as messengers to the goddess of spring and the dawn, Eostre, who also assumed the form of a human-sized hare on the night of a full moon. In Celtic mythology, hares were sacred creatures due to the fact that they were believed to have direct access to the Otherworld. It was therefore considered sacrilege to consume their meat. Later, with the rise of Christianity, certain elements of these pagan myths would get re-appropriated by Christians. The goddess’ name Eostre would be transformed into Easter, the name of the Christian celebration of the resurrection of Christ and the earlier pagan belief that during the vernal equinox rabbits would deliver eggs would evolve into the modern day tradition which sees the Easter Bunny deliver chocolate eggs to children on Easter Sunday. 

Image by Monika Ruminska Akwarele

Witchcraft Associations

Prior to leading the revolt against the Romans in 60 CE, warrior queen Boudicca is said to have performed a divination involving a hare which was believed to foretell their impending victory when it ran to the side of the Brits as she released it from the folds of her cloak. However, once the Christian faith spread across the Western world, many of the earlier positive connections made between women and hares began to fall out of favour instead becoming lnegatively linked to witchcraft. Nowadays we most often assume the black cat to be the witch’s most faithful companion, yet in actual fact, rabbit and hares were once believed to be the preferred familiars of European witches, supposedly assisting them in their magical spells. Due to these associations, to this day across the British Isles it is still widely considered bad luck should a hare cross your path (much like the black cat) and there is a wealth of folklore and superstition which makes the hare and the witch allies in the dark arts.

During the 16th century as the witch-hunt craze took hold of Britain so too did the belief that women had to power to metamorphose into hares. Scottish and Irish folklore is especially abundant with tales of shapeshifting witches taking the form of hares such as “The Beekeeper and the Bewitched Hare” which can be found in the 1962 collection, Thistle & Thyme: Tales & Legends from Scotland by Sorche Nic Leodhas. Many more tales purport to witches assuming this animal’s form in order to steal milk or butter from members of local communities, returning to human form if caught. These include “The Witch Hare,” which was collected by WB Yeats in Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry in 1888. The Irish butter stealing hag hare motif has since been revised by playwright, author and folklorist Eilis Ni Dhuibhne in the play, Dún na mBan trí Thine (The Women’s Fort is on Fire) which according to Sarah O’Connor uses the nonhuman identity of the hare to enable women “to challenge social boundaries and traditional hierarchies.”

Image by Monika Ruminska Akwarele

In Ireland, it was widely believed that witches and hares were so attuned to each other that if a hare was somehow injured a witch in that community would also display the same injury. According to Patricia Monaghan, shooting a hare with a silver bullet was considered the best way to reveal the witches true form, much like the method adopted for ousting men disguised as werewolves in European folklore.

Links between hares and acts of witchcraft have also made their way into the history books, including rumours which suggested Anne Boleyn, the second wife of Henry VIII was a witch. A voiceless victim of patriarchy who was beheaded for her supposed adultery and inability to bore the king a prized male heir, she is now said to take the form of a hare when she haunts her parish church. Isobel Gowdie, who is often regarded as Scotland’s most famous ‘witch,’ after voluntarily confessing to acts of witchcraft in 1662 personally believed that she was granted the power to transform into a hare by the Devil himself in order to do his bidding. On one occasion, Gowdie described being chased by a pack of hounds whilst assuming her non-human form, uttering this disenchanting charm in order to save herself:

Hare, hare, God send thee care!

I am in a hare’s likeness now;

But I shall be a woman even now-

— Hare, hare, God send thee care!

Tales of Trickery

Acts of trickery and deception are frequently associated with hares and rabbits in folklore around the globe, including the story of the Irish Fairy Rabbit. When travelling to and from Tory, and island off the north-west coast of Ireland, sea voyagers would superstitiously carry earth collected from their homes in their pockets in order to protect them from this malevolent being whom it was believed attempted to lure people into being drowned at sea. During the 18th century, an English woman named Mary Toft managed to fool doctors into believing she had given birth to a bury of rabbits which the woman believed was brought on by the earlier trauma of being startled by one. Clearly a victim of ‘maternal impression,’ a now discounted medical theory in which it was thought that emotional stimuli could be transmitted to the unborn foetus and cause birth defects, Toft eventually admitted to manually inserting the dead rabbits and feigning their birth. Let down by the State rather than giving her the psychological treatment she so obviously neeed, she was later charged with fraud and incarcerated. Toft’s story is retold by Irish author Emma Donoghue’s short story collection, The Woman Who Gave Birth to Rabbits (2002) which also documents other peculiar happenings which have taken place in the history of the British Isles.

Yet perhaps the most subversive hare to emerge is the one which has been the subject of many African folk tales who is depicted as a notorious trickster who uses his intellect to outwit others. Tales of trickster hares spread across America as a result of being transmitted by West African slaves. These earlier tales are believed to have heavily influenced the stories surrounding the popular African American folkloric figure, Br’er Rabbit. Believed to represent enslaved Africans exacting their revenge on white oppressors and overcoming adversity, this trickster hare has consequently become a symbol for deconstructing oppressive hierarchies of subjugation. In 1982, Toni Morrison uses the one of the most well-known Br’er Rabbit tales, about a tar baby for the inspiration for her novel, Tar Baby. In Writing Tricksters, Jeanne Rosier Smith describes Morrison as using the tale to develop an “array of trickster characters, whose conflicting attitudes toward community allow her to simultaneously affirm the importance of culture building and challenge prescribed gender roles within African American communities.”

Sam Young is editor and founder of Lyonesse. Monika Ruminska Akwarele is a self-taught artist, born in 1988, in Warsaw, Poland who has always loved painting and creating art. She cites animals and nature as her greatest inspiration and gets a lot of creative energy from watching the seasons changing. Painting mostly with watercolours, which are her favourite medium she also sometimes uses ink and gouache paints. You can view more of her beautiful nature inspired art over on her Instagram page @eszillui

Recommended Reading

Donoghue, Emma. The Woman Who Gave Birth to Rabbits, London: Virago, 2002.

Morrison, Toni. Tar Baby. New York: Knopf, 1981.

Nich Leodhas, Sorche, “The Beekeeper and the Bewitched Hare,” Thistle & Thyme: Tales & Legends from Scotland, 1962.

Jeanne Rosier Smith, Tracey. Writing Tricksters: Mythic Gambols in American Ethnic Literature, Los Angeles:University of California Press, 1997.

Yeats, W.B. “The Witch Hare,” Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry, London: Walter Scott, 1888.

Kirkpatrick, Kathryn, Faragó Borbála et al, Animals in Irish Literature and Culture, London: Palgrave, 2015.

The Enchantment of Spring: Women Writers Discuss their Favourite European Flora Folklore, Superstitions & Rituals

Folklore & Fairy Tales

As we slowly emerge from a year better suited to the plotline of a dystopian science fiction novel, this year more than ever the recent arrival of spring brought with it the promise of brighter days ahead. In this most magical period of metamorphosis, once the ice begins to thaw, spring flowers and plants, much like us mortals, start to peep their heads up out of the earth in search of the sun. And as trees blossom and flora magically transforms the forest floor and meadows into a kaleidoscope of colours, a walk amongst nature might well lead you to believe you’ve entered your own living breathing fairy tale. Thanks to their unique forms and ability to incite a sense of wonder, it’s perhaps not all that surprising that flowers and trees frequently spring up in European folklore, where they are revealed time and time again to have magical or supernatural abilities and be laden with superstitions. So to celebrate the enchantment of this glorious season and its flora, some of our best-loved women writers and poets take us on a magical journey through Northern Europe’s spring forests and meadows, sharing some of their favourite flora folklore, superstitions and rituals along the way.

Niamh Boyce, acclaimed Irish writer of the novel The Herbalist and fairy tale themed poetry collection Inside the Wolf nostalgically recalls frolicking in Irish spring meadows as a young girl and indulging in the flower picking rituals and superstitions linked to their wildflowers.

Spring arriving, with its snowdrops and daffodils, reminds me of playing with flowers as a very young child – hunkering on the grass and plucking daisy petals to forecast (does he love me, or love me not!) or splitting their stems with our thumbnails and making daisy chains to put around our necks or wear as crowns and parade around. We held buttercups beneath each other’s chins – a golden shine on your skin meant you loved butter. We blew dandelion clocks to tell the time, and avoided ‘pissy bed’ flowers out of superstition – so much of our play had magical elements, we were such happy little pagans.

bellis perennis

A year into the pandemic, Jen Campbell, the marvellous British author of the magical The Beginning of the World in the Middle of the Night short story collection and book of poetry, Girl Aquarium, has spent the past twelve months shielding in her home. In this diary entry, she ventures out at 5am to walk through an ancient spring forest, where a discovery of a bed of Wood Anemone sparks a reflection on its magical and more sickly folkloric associations.

anenome nemorosa

In the forest at the end of our street, we come across a bed of Wood Anemone. The seeds of this plant are mostly infertile, so stumbling across large amounts of it is seen as proof of ancient woodland. I crouch down to look, feeling the soil underneath, which is soft, and this — according to Lewis Carroll — means that these flowers cannot talk because they are fast asleep. The Wood Anemone’s sepals are white, not green, which gives the appearance of petals — in fact, they look like pale, white buttercups. 

They are delicate little things. Greek mythology tells us they sprouted from Aphrodite’s tears, as she wept over the death of Adonis. The Romans believed that the first to flower, every spring, should be plucked as a charm against infection. Folk would herd the ghostly flowers into their arms, proclaiming: “I gather these against all diseases!” The flowers would then be tied around the necks of the sick while they prayed.

It starts to rain, so I stand up to go home, pulling my coat close to me. The Wood Anemone closes itself in wet weather, too. Folklore would have us believe that this is to keep fairies safe and dry inside their flowers. And even though, like all anemones, the Wood Anemone is poisonous, it is said to have medicinal properties, especially against respiratory infections. Ingest too much, however, and you will die. In China, they call Wood Anemones the flower of death.

Folklorist Niina Niskanen shares some of the rituals and folklore connected to her native Finland’s forest flowers, Violet and Twinflower and Lily of the Valley, long used to entice fairies and to attract or repel potential lovers.

viola

Some wildflower violets commonly found in Finland are the Forest Violet (Metsä-orvokki) and the Marsh Violet (Suo-orvokki). According to folklore, wild violets are thought to have magical abilities. They are also believed to attract fairies with the violet was being a portal to the fairy tale otherworld. In rituals, Violet was also the flower of the lovesick and was used to attract true love and provide protection from evil spirits. Similarly to violets, another common flower found in Finnish forests called the Twinflower (Vanamo) is also said to entice fairies as well as forest spirits. The bell-like flowers of the Vanamo mean that it has been given the nicknames harakankello (magpie´s bell) sirkunkello (singing bird´s bell).

Lily of the Valley is Finland’s national flower with its name in Finnish kielo, referring to the tongue-shaped leaves or Tongue (Kieli) and Cow’s Tongue (Lehmänkieli). Said to protect spell casters from the evil eye and keep unwanted suitors at bay, they are extremely poisonous so beware should you come across them on a trip to the forest!

Deirdre Sullivan, author of feminist fairy tale retellings Savage Her Reply and Tangleweed and Brine and numerous equally brilliant novels, reflects on encountering the warmth of the dandelion in spring fields and the folklore superstitions linked to the hawthorn tree: a favourite of the Celts who once ruled of her native Ireland, and witches alike.

taraxacum

In terms of everyday plants, the Dandelion is one that I really like, for setting intentions, and to serve as a reminder of warmth and happiness. It’s a very common little plant, and the combination of its bright sunburst, and its healing properties mean I always enjoy seeing it. I also tend to be drawn to trees with somewhat sinister associations, the Hawthorn being the one most grounded in Irish folklore and superstition for its connection to the fairy realm, and the implied threat to anyone who harms it. I like the tradition of planting yew trees in graveyards, and the connection that it has to longevity, death and rebirth. I also found the fact that it was poisonous extremely fascinating and compelling as a child.

Susan Earlam, writer of the forthcoming eco-horror novel, Earthly Bodies, meditates on the secret life of an Italian walnut tree, an ancient being who has been the innocent bystander to witchcraft rituals practised at its base in the 13th century. During Sabbats, witches were believed to hold banquets, engage in ecstatic dance and even orgies with demons who took the shape of cats and goats at the foot of one particular tree, and through use of a flying ointment, supposedly took flight before becoming spirits of the wind.

During research for writing a novel, I discovered some stories around Walnut trees, specifically one in the Benevento region of Italy which was connected to a group of local women, then seen as witches, in the region. In addition to the local women, “witches” were said to have travelled from all over Europe to practice rituals at the base of this particular tree. I’m really interested in how trees bear witness to life and time passing, and this tree must have had many tales to tell.

juglan

Emma Carney, practicing witch and founder of the Digital Coven, grew up on a farm where she spent lazy spring days seeking out fairy folk and channelling the spring goddess Persephone in its surrounding meadows and woodlands.

prunus serrulata

Spring to me has always been the most magical season. I was always enchanted by the myth of Persephone as a young child, and to be honest I still am. I imagined her emerging back into the world, the ground literally singing in glee as it was reenergised, ready to gestate new life. My family farm always had a blanket of daffodils and I took a lot of pleasure in learning all the varieties, finding a new one each year. I also have the most wonderful memories of making daisy chains with my friends in the fields and crowning each other as the Queen of Spring whilst doing little dances in a circle holding hands. I still have some of these crowns, dried between book pages and saved for prosperity behind a glass frame.

As I wandered through the woodland, I delighted in the spouting of the Snowdrops and Bluebells, making sure to visit the secret nooks where they would grow annually. Being from Irish stock, folklore was rife in my Family and I believed that the Fae would make dresses and hats out of their petals. I was careful never to pick them though, just to look. On sunnier days, my cousins and I would always go exploring to see if we could see the little people at the bottom of our garden. I truly believed that they had frequent meetings behind the flowers there. In spring it was the Cherry Blossom which I used to collect up into big piles and mush between my fingers, breathing in its fragrant smell. 

Eventually, as I have grown into the Witch that I am today, I still collect Cherry Blossom for my spells, using it in the oil that I make in my Moon water for spell work. I often dry some of the petals for future use, mainly for self-love and abundance work. However, I still make sure to mush some between my fingers for old time’s sake though. Some memories are sacred.

Poet and nature writer Bethan Langford reflects on the beauty and superstitions linked to the Wales’ national flower, the daffodil. Synonymous with this time of year and instantly identifiable trumpet-like head, the flower is connected to numerous folktales, myths and shrouded in superstition. 

Whoosh! Their heads are up and we’re off, into the rambling spring once more with daffodils, daffodils and more daffodils! Be they the thinner, paler-petalled wild British daffodils, or the darker more well-known variety, this charismatic flower perfectly conjures up the season, with all its connotations of new life, hope and joy. Growing up in Wales, where it is our national flower, deciding whether to wear that humble leek or a bright daffodil on the Dewi Sant Eisteddfod (feast of St David) was an easy choice. 

narcissus

Daffodils have long dominated the landscape in Wales and indeed across the British Isles, perhaps largely due to their poisonous sap which simultaneously prevents many plants from sharing its company and animals from making it dinner. These near-ubiquitous flowers are beautiful, and they know it. Pouting their coronas towards the sky, they are also known in Latin as Narcissus and connected to the Greek myth. And the names go on: yellow maidens, butter and eggs, Easter roses, lent lilies (from their appearance between Ash Wednesday and Easter), Cenhinen Bedr (Welsh for Peter’s leek) or sometimes daffydowndilly if you were around during the 16th Century.

Yet when it comes to this cheerful flower, it seems that joy is only to be found in the company of others, for whilst a bunch of daffodils are thought to grant happiness, a single bloom is said to bring misfortune. In medieval Europe, a single Daffodil was also believed to portend death if it drooped when you looked at it. Yet should you be the first to notice the initial Welsh Daffodil of the season then your following year may be filled with riches. Avoid trampling them at all costs for this effort might bring good luck too! With their cheerful, seemingly fateful, presence everywhere, I shall certainly try.

After abandoning UK shores for the Dutch city of Haarlem several years ago, writer Jayne Robinson wistfully recalls the magic of chance encounters with the bluebell patches of Britain’s woods before delving into their more sinister superstitions.

Since leaving my home country of the UK six years ago, something I miss most in springtime is the joy and age-old wonder of stumbling unexpectedly upon a patch of bluebells in the woods. Surely one of nature’s most enchanting gifts, almost half of the world’s bluebells can be found illuminating the forest floors of the British Isles’ most ancient woodlands – some of which are thought to be the last remaining traces of the wildwood which covered its landscape after the last ice age.

hyacinthoides

From the violet haze that swirls like a will-o’-the-wisp between the trees to the up-close beauty of these little fairy bells with their curled-up toes, this dainty species holds a power like few others. The bluebell is at its most bewitching in shaded woodland areas, where cool conditions intensify its purple colour. This duality of shade and beauty, at once ancient and fleeting, is at the heart of the sinister folklore that surrounds the flower.

If a child picks a bluebell in a bluebell wood, they will never be seen again. These secret places have also long been known as enchanted portals to another realm, where people are carried away by fairies. It is also said that blue bells ring to call all the fairies to a gathering, but if a human hears the sound, it would be their death knell. Harbinger of death, yes but as one of the first flowers of spring, the bluebell is also a symbol of life and rebirth. And the fact that it’s a spring flower which rings out in the darkest of places means its a symbol we could all find a little hope in just now.

Many thanks to the writers who so kindly contributed to this feature. You will be able to read interviews with authors Niamh Boyce, Jen Campbell, Deirdre Sullivan and folklorist Niina Niskanen in the coming weeks.