Kerisl

piles of old books scattered in an abandoned room

Kerisl

n.
the sorrow of imagining the wealth of knowledge forever lost to history—knowing we’ll never hear the language of the Etruscans, the battle cry of the Sea Peoples, or the burial chants of the Neanderthals; that we’ll never read any more than a fragment of the works of Blake, Sappho, Aristotle, or Jesus; or enjoy the untold treasures of so many burned libraries and forgotten oral traditions and unrecorded songs—any of which might have made up the cornerstone of the canon, that we’d all be able to quote by heart and couldn’t imagine living without.

A contraction of Kergeulen Islands. Roughly equidistant between Australia, Antarctica, and Madagascar, they are the only visible remnant of the Kergeulen microcontinent, which was submerged some twenty million years ago. Three times the size of Japan, it was once covered in dense conifer forests, with peaks reaching 2,000 meters above sea level, populated with strange and nameless fauna that must have called it home, before all traces were lost beneath the waves. Pronounced “kair-ahyl.”

Aftersome

rows of opaque and clear marbles

Midsummer

a person standing in a garden holding a clock

Present-Tense

a close-up of a stopwatch

Yeorie

a woman with tendrils of smoke moving across her face

Nowlings

a pile of black and white puzzle pieces

Alpha Exposure

a close-up of a baby with diffusion filter

Rasque

close-up of the shards of a broken vase

O’Erpine

a person looking at a grave

Clockwise

a close-up of flower along with polaroid pictures

Pithered

stacks of papers and folders piled high on a table

Énouement

a hand opening a curtain

Blinkback

a wall full of pictures and objects

Wytai

Achenia

a close-up of a bottle with an organic object inside

Malotype

Nachlophobia

Karanoia

a neat stack of white paper

Elsing

Grayshift

a spiral staircase from above

Antiophobia

Innity

a neatly made bed with diffused light glowing