Hag Dances, Susan Wismer
At Bay Press, 2025
Susan Wismer’s Hag Dances is firmly fastened in
earth, stretching its roots back to ancient things that speak of wisdom that’s
learned from being close to the natural world. Each poem is like “the
new-cracked egg of a just-born day.” Wismer’s series of sonnets, aptly titled
“A Crown for the Kitchen,” conjures a redheaded spatula, a brown betty teapot,
a saucepan, a pine table, a kitchen window, a corn broom, and a chipped cup.
The kitchen becomes a centre point for conversation, the sharing of stories
between generations of women, and the sacred place where magic enters the equation.
Crone wisdom is present in this crown of sonnets and artfully weaves itself
through the other poems in Hag Dances.
There’s witchy wisdom here as Wismer highlights the
power of the natural world. Nothing is without spirit or soul. Everything—from
weather and seasonal changes, to trees, rocks, birds, and animals—has a sacred
purpose. In “Night Vision,” she writes of autumn leaves that “crumble,
whisper/under three stars, white bands of cloud” and of trees whose “hands
reach naked/through moon’s falling light//their prayers constant, implacable,
rising.” In “Invocation,” the speaker’s voice is that of a wise woman who is depicted
in the first stanza as a blurry watercolour that is reminiscent of the mythic Macbeth
witches: “Black shawl scry mutter/stone spellbag herbs potions/boil iron
cauldron,” but then changes point of view in the second stanza: “I am
bent-fired on broomstick/in cackling flight/through obsidian nights.” In the
final two stanzas, written in italics, a spell blooms so that the crone voice
calls out, entreating Hecate to listen: “Hear me beat, beat away/at the
imperilled heart/of the Anthropocene.” That speaker’s voice embodies the
overall tone and theme of the book in its awareness of the importance of the
natural world, and the rhythms of life—including the seasons of living, aging,
and dying. This poem’s spell works at wishing away the negativity of the
Anthropocene, reminding readers that there is always hope, even on the darkest
days.
History speaks in Hag Dances, in poems like
“Dresden Cup,” which traces the provenance of three china cups and saucers that
initially sit by the side of a war-torn Polish road in 1943—"spare
beauties of smooth rounded shape/some hesitant hand/brushed paint over porcelain” but are carried by a woman
“all through that war/scalpel and morphine/her doctor-hands bloodied” to
England in 1945, and then used again in Canada in 2025. Artifacts of humanity
pass through times of war and peace, telling stories of family history through
a matrilineal line. In “Spirits,” Wismer reflects on her “stubborn Scottish
pride” when she speaks of “ancestors made of madness” who were evicted by the
Highland Clearances. Ghosts, they “appear in bagpipes, old rubber boots,/dance
on worn kitchen floors” as “language lilts/shadows” and “ghost Gaelic traces
lift” off a “flat English tongue.” In the various Celtic traditions, ancestors
are as real as living people, so it makes sense that Wismer considers how time
works in a lifetime, and through centuries. The veils or borders that exist
between worlds and dimensions, but also between the lines that mark out
generations of relatives, are thin.
The notion of pilgrimage is present in the collection,
with references to travel and to the Camino de Santiago, and mention of a world that is
“already shattered/and still breaking.” Whether focused on the threat that
exists to a single woman walking on dark city streets in “Walk Home,” or on the
fawn that lies hurt on the road in “North of Verona, Canoe Lake Road,” with the
man who “has fawn fur on his hands” when he returns from moving it to temporary
safety before it dies, Wismer creates the extended metaphor of life as a
pilgrimage, where the worth is in the journey, not necessarily in the destination.
Hageography, the last section in Hag Dances,
plays with the meaning behind the word “hagiography,” which may refer to a
biography that puts a person in a very flattering light, or may also refer to
the study of saints or venerated people. In this case, the pun comes in on the
image and symbol of what a hag stereotypically represents. Wismer writes of
crones who are wise women, not women who have been demeaned by western society
and culture. These are not crones who are feared, but oracles who offer wisdom
to those who seek them out.
The figure of a bain sidhe (banshee) shows up
in the poem “At the Crossroads,” where her image is described beautifully as
being “cloaked in pale folds/of dark winter’s coming/rock water sky” and that
her arrival is shown as a “dance to the glisten of sleet/frozen earth/keen
skirl of hawk cries.” Rather than being portrayed as a terrifying being who
carries the dying one off in her arms, as the banshee is usually depicted, this
portrayal links her power and beauty to the spirit of the land, weather, and
seasonal shifts. Hags, crones, witches, or wise women—no matter what you call
them—honour the passage of time and growth. In “A Starker Form of Art,” the
speaker writes of learning to “love angles, sharp elbows,/Straighter lines in
the shapes of my age” and notes that they are “alive in the flesh of my own
slow/dissolving, blurred lines through/my eveningtime eyes.” The body of the
speaker becomes the “starker form of art” as “it dances a gradual/descent
towards Earth.” Aging is no longer to be feared, but rather seen as a proof of
wisdom that’s been gathered over time.
Hag Dances is Susan Wismer’s joyous
poetic spell of celebration, of noticing how words and poems become magical
incantations that remind readers of how time shifts and moves, how the natural
world offers us solace through difficult times, and how humans are only here
for a short while. The wisdom isn’t far from the noticing and mindfulness, and
the peace is still possible in the times of war. The poems in this collection
remind this reviewer of Sharon Blackie’s Hagitude or The Enchanted
Life, books that recall ancient mythical stories that speak to where
women fit into the natural and elemental worlds of fire, earth, sky, and water.
Hag Dances speaks to women as they gain knowledge and wisdom as they
age—offering something to share with those who come afterwards.

Kim Fahner lives and writes in
Sudbury, Ontario. Her most recent books include The Pollination Field
(Turnstone, 2025) and The Donoghue Girl (Latitude 46, 2024). She is the
Chair of The Writers' Union of Canada (TWUC) and recently won first place for
her CNF essay, "What You Carry," in The Ampersand Review's
2024 essay contest. Kim may be reached via her author website.