×

Wireh ✨

In Old English, it carries weight beyond simple anger. Wireh is what you become when you are cut off—from the hearth, from the handshake of a lord, from the bread and salt of fellowship. The wīte (punishment) follows the wireh like a wolf trailing a sick deer. To name someone wireh was to place them outside the circle of language itself, where even the wind seemed to avoid them.

We have softened this old word. Our "curse" can be a joke, a muttered frustration over a broken cup. But wireh remembers a time when words had teeth, when a single syllable could exile you from the world of the living. It reminds us that the most terrible thing is not to be hated—but to be forgotten. To be wireh . In Old English, it carries weight beyond simple anger

And somewhere, at the bottom of a dark Anglo-Saxon well, that word is still sinking. Still cursing. Still waiting. To name someone wireh was to place them

Think of the outcast sitting at the edge of the marsh, breath clouding in the cold, no one to speak their name. Or think of the curse carved into a lead tablet, buried in a well so the water would carry the poison. Wireh is not fire and brimstone—it is silence. It is the moment when the tribe turns its back, and the only sound left is your own footsteps walking nowhere. But wireh remembers a time when words had

It begins not with a shout, but with a whisper. A word left to rot in the margins of a ninth-century homily: wireh . Curse. Accursed one.

THE KICKASS MURDER CLUB

MISTY storms into action with a smile as dangerous as her kicks, turning the world’s “most impregnable ...

In Old English, it carries weight beyond simple anger. Wireh is what you become when you are cut off—from the hearth, from the handshake of a lord, from the bread and salt of fellowship. The wīte (punishment) follows the wireh like a wolf trailing a sick deer. To name someone wireh was to place them outside the circle of language itself, where even the wind seemed to avoid them.

We have softened this old word. Our "curse" can be a joke, a muttered frustration over a broken cup. But wireh remembers a time when words had teeth, when a single syllable could exile you from the world of the living. It reminds us that the most terrible thing is not to be hated—but to be forgotten. To be wireh .

And somewhere, at the bottom of a dark Anglo-Saxon well, that word is still sinking. Still cursing. Still waiting.

Think of the outcast sitting at the edge of the marsh, breath clouding in the cold, no one to speak their name. Or think of the curse carved into a lead tablet, buried in a well so the water would carry the poison. Wireh is not fire and brimstone—it is silence. It is the moment when the tribe turns its back, and the only sound left is your own footsteps walking nowhere.

It begins not with a shout, but with a whisper. A word left to rot in the margins of a ninth-century homily: wireh . Curse. Accursed one.

wireh

wireh

BACK TO TOP

SIGN UP FOR MAILING LIST

To receive the latest news and info  plus special offers, leave your name and email below...

By ticking this box you certify that you are at least 16 years old, and agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

Kick Ass Kandy – Home of the kickassiest girl gang in the goddam universe. Expertly trained in unarmed combat and smart ass put downs, these girls are going to kick ass, take names and then kick some more ass. © 2026 Solid Ultra Insight.com - All Rights Reserved