O’Erpine

a person looking at a grave

O’Erpine

v. intr.
to wander through the grounds of a cemetery, glancing over the gravestones as if you were people-watching the dead, imagining all the things they must have seen and the lives they might have led, trying to conjure up an entire biography from a handful of words and dates etched in granite, with barely more than a single dash to cover the unimaginable vastness of their experience.

From over, finished and done with + pine, to yearn or grieve for something. Compare the flowering perennial orpine, also called autumn joy or live-forevers, which is often found in open sunny areas of cemeteries. Pronounced “awr-pahyn.”

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

Monachopsis

Elsing

Midding

Hemeisis

Mal De Coucou

a blurry image of several men

Suente

Karanoia

a neat stack of white paper

The Meantime

Allope