• Signing Off for 2025 - The End of Season One
    Nov 24 2025

    This short episode marks the final page of Season One of Hex & Muse - a gentle closing ritual for a year of folklore, magic, art, and storytelling. I’m taking the rest of the year to finish uni, slow down, and actually breathe through the festive season, but I’ll return in the new year with fresh stories, rituals, and the beginning of Season Two. Thank you to everyone who has listened, shared, and helped this little community grow. Light a candle for the year we’ve lived, and I’ll see you soon.

    Hex & Muse is recorded on the lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. I pay my deepest respects to their Elders past and present - and to all First Nations people, whose stories and spirits continue to shape this land.

    Follow along for more folklore, magic, and mythic musings:
    Instagram: @hexandmuse
    Website: www.hexandmuse.com

    Hex & Muse is a spellbound journal of folklore, magic, art, and the sacred feminine - told through cinematic storytelling and whispered histories.
    From my altar to yours… thank you for listening.

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    2 mins
  • Mary Shelley - The Mother of Monsters
    Nov 2 2025

    In this haunting and beautiful episode of Hex & Muse, we step into the storm that changed the world. Born of lightning and grief, Mary Shelley dreamt a monster into being and in doing so, gave birth to modern horror, science fiction, and a mirror for the human soul.

    Through thunder over Lake Geneva, the ghost-story challenge at Villa Diodati, and the heartbreak that shaped Frankenstein, this episode traces how an eighteen-year-old woman stole fire from the gods and rewrote creation itself.

    We explore her lineage daughter of revolutionaries, lover of poets, widow of fire and her quiet defiance in a world that feared the power of female imagination. Because Mary Shelley was never just the author of Frankenstein. She was the Modern Prometheus of gothic literature - the girl who gave the dark a heartbeat.

    Featuring reflections on Guillermo del Toro’s forthcoming adaptation of Frankenstein, starring Jacob Elordi and Mia Goth.

    ⚡ Trigger Warning: This episode includes brief discussion of infant loss and grief, handled with tenderness and care.


    ✴︎ References & Further Reading

    *Mary Shelley, * Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818 & 1831 editions).
    William Godwin -An Enquiry Concerning Political Justice (1793).
    Mary Wollstonecraft - A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792).
    Richard Holmes - Shelley: The Pursuit (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1974).
    Miranda Seymour - Mary Shelley (John Murray, 2000).
    Fiona Sampson - In Search of Mary Shelley: The Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein (Profile Books, 2018).
    Anne K. Mellor - Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters (Routledge, 1988).
    Charlotte Gordon - Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelley (Random House, 2015).
    Kathleen Stocking -The Villa Diodati Circle: Byron, Polidori, Shelley & the Birth of Frankenstein (Oxford Classics, 1999).
    Frances Wilson - The Ballad of Dorothy Wordsworth (for context on the Romantic circle).
    Guillermo del Toro - Frankenstein (Netflix / forthcoming, starring Jacob Elordi & Mia Goth).

    For deeper gothic and Romantic context:
    The British Library “Discovering Literature: Romantics & Victorians.”
    The Morgan Library - Frankenstein Manuscripts Project.
    The Romantic Circles Online Archive - University of Maryland.

    Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, The Modern Prometheus, Romantic poets, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lord Byron, John Polidori, Villa Diodati, Lake Geneva, gothic literature, science fiction origins, feminist writers, literary history, witchy podcast, Hex and Muse, women in literature, Guillermo del Toro Frankenstein, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, creative myth, female imagination, poetic storytelling, art and alchemy, haunting history, dark romanticism.

    Hex & Muse is recorded on the lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. I pay my deepest respects to their Elders past and present - and to all First Nations people, whose stories and spirits continue to shape this land.

    Follow along for more folklore, magic, and mythic musings:
    Instagram: @hexandmuse
    Website: www.hexandmuse.com

    Hex & Muse is a spellbound journal of folklore, magic, art, and the sacred feminine - told through cinematic storytelling and whispered histories.
    From my altar to yours… thank you for listening.

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    38 mins
  • Nicnevin - Queen of Elphame
    Oct 19 2025

    As spring blooms in the southern world and autumn deepens in the north, the veil thins across both. Tonight, Hex & Muse crosses that unseen border to meet Nicnevin - the Hallow Queen of Scotland.

    She rides through centuries of poetry, persecution, and myth: from Renaissance verse to witch-trial confessions, from the moors of Fife to the snow-clad peaks of Ben Nevis. Part goddess, part ghost, part faerie queen, Nicnevin is the keeper of thresholds - a spirit who walks between life and death, storm and stillness, the sacred and the forbidden.

    In this journey through folklore and history, we trace her lineage to the ancient Cailleach, whose storm-grey plaid blankets the mountains in snow, and rediscover the witch not as a creature of fear, but as a guardian of balance and change.

    Light your candle.
    Step into the dark.

    The Hallow Queen is riding.


    Primary Mentions

    • The Flyting of Montgomerie and Polwarth (c.1585) — Alexander Montgomerie’s poem; earliest known mention of Nicnevin.
    • Trial of Nic Nevin, St Andrews (1569) — later chroniclers link this woman to the legend; connection uncertain.
    • Confessions of Bessie Dunlop (1576) & Andro Man (1598) — both describe serving the “Queen of Elphame.” See Robert Pitcairn, Criminal Trials in Scotland (1833).

    Folklore & Literature

    • Robert Cromek, Remains of Nithsdale and Galloway Song (1808).
    • Sir Walter Scott, Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft (1830).
    • Katharine Briggs, A Dictionary of Fairies (1976).
    • J. F. Campbell, Popular Tales of the West Highlands (1860).
    • Lizanne Henderson & Edward J. Cowan, Scottish Fairy Belief: A History (2001).

    The Cailleach & Seasonal Myth

    • F. Marian McNeill, The Silver Bough (1957–68).
    • James MacKillop, Dictionary of Celtic Mythology (Oxford, 1998).
    • Folklore of the Corryvreckan Whirlpool — the Cailleach washes her plaid white, signalling winter (see Popular Tales of the West Highlands; Scotland’s Wonder – The Cailleach: Hag of Winter).

    Modern Analyses & Context

    • Ronald Hutton, The Witch: A History of Fear (Yale, 2017).
    • Lizanne Henderson, Witchcraft and Folk Belief in the Age of Enlightenment (Palgrave, 2016).
    • Alison Hanham, The Flyting of Montgomerie and Polwarth: Text and Commentary (1960).
    • F. Marian McNeill, Hallowe’en: Its Origin, Rites and Ceremonies in the Scottish Tradition (1923).
    • Dictionaries of the Scots Language (dsl.ac.uk) — entry for Nicnevin.
    • Wikipedia — “Nicnevin” and “Cailleach” entries for linguistic and mythological summaries.

    Hex & Muse is recorded on the lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. I pay my deepest respects to their Elders past and present - and to all First Nations people, whose stories and spirits continue to shape this land.

    Follow along for more folklore, magic, and mythic musings:
    Instagram: @hexandmuse
    Website: www.hexandmuse.com

    Hex & Muse is a spellbound journal of folklore, magic, art, and the sacred feminine - told through cinematic storytelling and whispered histories.
    From my altar to yours… thank you for listening.

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    18 mins
  • The Raven - A Reading by Candlelight
    Oct 16 2025

    Once upon a midnight dreary...

    In this special reading, Hex & Muse drifts through the flicker of candlelight to meet one of literature’s most haunting visitations Edgar Allan Poe’s The Raven. First published in 1845, this gothic masterpiece still beats with the same dark music: grief, longing, and the ache of a soul that cannot let go.

    Told in rhythmic, hypnotic verse, The Raven is a séance in language a lament that echoes between love and loss, dream and waking.
    In this episode, Emily performs the poem aloud as it was meant to be heard: with breath, silence, and reverence. Every “Nevermore” tolls like a bell through the dark, a reminder of how beauty and despair so often share the same heartbeat.

    So light your candles, draw the curtains, and listen close.
    The air stirs.
    A knock upon the chamber door.
    And from the shadow, a voice - eternal, mournful - calling once more.

    🕯️ Written by Edgar Allan Poe (1845).
    🎙️ Read and produced by Emily Esen for Hex & Muse.

    Hex & Muse is recorded on the lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. I pay my deepest respects to their Elders past and present - and to all First Nations people, whose stories and spirits continue to shape this land.

    Follow along for more folklore, magic, and mythic musings:
    Instagram: @hexandmuse
    Website: www.hexandmuse.com

    Hex & Muse is a spellbound journal of folklore, magic, art, and the sacred feminine - told through cinematic storytelling and whispered histories.
    From my altar to yours… thank you for listening.

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    8 mins
  • Witches on Screen - From Celluloid Shadows to Cinema’s Spell
    Oct 13 2025

    From silent trick films to technicolour queens, from broomsticks to suburban sitcoms, from horror’s hysteria to feminist reclamation - cinema has never stopped conjuring the witch.

    In this episode of Hex & Muse, we trace her journey through a century of film: the haunted illusions of Georges Méliès, the fevered beauty of Häxan, the vanity of Disney’s mirror-obsessed queen, the domestic rebellion of Bewitched, the dread of Rosemary’s Baby, the velvet defiance of the 90s, and the reflective power of modern cinema.

    The witch has worn many faces - monster, muse, scapegoat, saint - but her image on screen tells us more about us than her. Each era projects its fears and fascinations onto her body, revealing what the world loves, hates, and still doesn’t understand about women who refuse to soften.

    A cinematic séance for those who love folklore, feminism, and film history - with a touch of candlelight.

    Films & Television:

    • Le Manoir du Diable (1896), dir. Georges Méliès
    • Häxan (1922), dir. Benjamin Christensen
    • Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937), dir. Walt Disney
    • The Wizard of Oz (1939), dir. Victor Fleming
    • Bell, Book and Candle (1958), dir. Richard Quine
    • Bewitched (1964–1972), created by Sol Saks
    • Rosemary’s Baby (1968), dir. Roman Polanski
    • Season of the Witch (1972), dir. George A. Romero
    • The Exorcist (1973), dir. William Friedkin
    • Suspiria (1977), dir. Dario Argento
    • The Craft (1996), dir. Andrew Fleming
    • Practical Magic (1998), dir. Griffin Dunne
    • Charmed (1998–2006), created by Constance M. Burge
    • The Witch (2015), dir. Robert Eggers
    • The Love Witch (2016), dir. Anna Biller
    • American Horror Story: Coven (2013), created by Ryan Murphy & Brad Falchuk
    • Motherland: Fort Salem (2020–2022), created by Eliot Laurence
    • Suspiria (2018), dir. Luca Guadagnino
    • The Wailing (2016), dir. Na Hong-jin
    • November (2017), dir. Rainer Sarnet
    • Border (2018), dir. Ali Abbasi

    📚 Further Reading
    Marina Warner – No Go the Bogeyman: Scaring, Lulling, and Making Mock (Oxford, 1998)
    Diane Purkiss – The Witch in History (Routledge, 1996)
    Ronald Hutton – The Triumph of the Moon (OUP, 1999)
    Silvia Federici – Caliban and the Witch (Autonomedia, 2004)
    Barbara Creed – The Monstrous-Feminine: Film, Feminism, Psychoanalysis (Routledge, 1993)
    Lucy Johnston – Witches: A History of Misogyny, Feminism and Magic (Laurence King, 2022)
    Anna Biller – “Witch, Please: Women, Power, and the Gaze,” Sight & Sound (2017)
    Kristen J. Sollée – “The Witch Wave: Pop Culture and the Occult Revival,” The New Inquiry (2018)
    Jason Colavito – “The Occult Roots of Cinema,” Journal of Film and History (2015)

    Hex & Muse is recorded on the lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. I pay my deepest respects to their Elders past and present - and to all First Nations people, whose stories and spirits continue to shape this land.

    Follow along for more folklore, magic, and mythic musings:
    Instagram: @hexandmuse
    Website: www.hexandmuse.com

    Hex & Muse is a spellbound journal of folklore, magic, art, and the sacred feminine - told through cinematic storytelling and whispered histories.
    From my altar to yours… thank you for listening.

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    36 mins
  • The Witching Hour - Folklore of Midnight & Thresholds
    Oct 5 2025

    What makes midnight so powerful and why do crossroads, mirrors, and doorways seem to hum with the same strange energy? This episode of Hex & Muse drifts through folklore, superstition, and the quiet psychology of liminal spaces, tracing how the witching hour became a symbol of transformation. From ancient rites and whispered superstitions to the ways we still navigate change today, it’s an exploration of thresholds- where the world softens, and something new begins to stir.


    Carl Jung – Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious
    Mircea Eliade – The Sacred and the Profane
    Ronald Hutton – The Triumph of the Moon
    Marina Warner – From the Beast to the Blonde
    Claude Lecouteux – The Tradition of Household Spirits
    Theresa Bane – Encyclopedia of Fairies in World Folklore and Mythology Katharine Briggs – An Encyclopedia of Fairies
    Giovanni Caputo – “The Strange-Face Illusion,” Perception, 2010
    Theoi Greek Mythology (online archive of Hecate and related deities)
    Encyclopedia of Shinto (Kokugakuin University) – Ushinotoki-Mairi: The Hour of the Ox
    Shakespeare, Hamlet (Act III, Scene II — “the very witching time of night”)

    These works informed the folklore, cultural history, and symbolic language woven through this episode.

    Hex & Muse is recorded on the lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. I pay my deepest respects to their Elders past and present - and to all First Nations people, whose stories and spirits continue to shape this land.

    Follow along for more folklore, magic, and mythic musings:
    Instagram: @hexandmuse
    Website: www.hexandmuse.com

    Hex & Muse is a spellbound journal of folklore, magic, art, and the sacred feminine - told through cinematic storytelling and whispered histories.
    From my altar to yours… thank you for listening.

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    37 mins
  • Familiars - The Witch’s Shadow
    Sep 21 2025

    In every tale of the witch, something moves just beyond her body - a cat’s green eyes, a hare in the fields, a raven circling overhead. These are the familiars: companions, protectors, and echoes of the witch’s own spirit.

    In this episode of Hex & Muse, we walk with them. From the witch trials of England and Scotland, where imps and “witch’s teats” became deadly evidence, to the enduring image of the old woman and her cats. From Shakespeare’s Graymalkin to Pullman’s dæmons, from Jiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service to modern witches who seek spirit-animals in ritual and dream.

    Familiars are not only folklore or fiction - they are a reminder that magic is never solitary. The witch always walks in company.

    Hex & Muse is recorded on the lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. I pay my deepest respects to their Elders past and present - and to all First Nations people, whose stories and spirits continue to shape this land.

    Follow along for more folklore, magic, and mythic musings:
    Instagram: @hexandmuse
    Website: www.hexandmuse.com

    Hex & Muse is a spellbound journal of folklore, magic, art, and the sacred feminine - told through cinematic storytelling and whispered histories.
    From my altar to yours… thank you for listening.

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    24 mins
  • Shadow Work - Myths, Magic & the Hidden Self
    Sep 7 2025

    In this episode of Hex & Muse, we step into the velvet dark - the hidden places within where our secrets, wounds, and unclaimed power wait. This is shadow work: the witch’s art of facing what has been buried, not to banish it, but to bring it home.

    Together we’ll wander through myth and folklore - Inanna’s descent to the underworld, Persephone crowned in shadow, Baba Yaga at the forest’s edge, Hel and the Morrígan, and the witch herself as a mirror for society’s fears. We’ll explore Jung’s idea of the shadow and how it rises in dreams, projections, and stories, before turning to the practices that make this work real: journaling, tarot, moon cycles, mirror rituals, and the quiet courage of speaking truths aloud.

    Shadow work is not glamorous magic. It is raw. It is salt on the wound. But it is also liberation - the slow alchemy of turning pain into power, ghosts into guides, silence into speech.

    Light your candle, breathe deep, and descend with me. The shadow is not your enemy. It is your teacher.

    Hex & Muse is recorded on the lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. I pay my deepest respects to their Elders past and present - and to all First Nations people, whose stories and spirits continue to shape this land.

    Follow along for more folklore, magic, and mythic musings:
    Instagram: @hexandmuse
    Website: www.hexandmuse.com

    Hex & Muse is a spellbound journal of folklore, magic, art, and the sacred feminine - told through cinematic storytelling and whispered histories.
    From my altar to yours… thank you for listening.

    Show More Show Less
    16 mins