Aether, a noun, borrowed from classical Latin. In Physics, the most subtle and highest part of the atmosphere where the pure air is found.

In Metaphysics, called the "Fifth Element" (with fire, air, water and earth), according to Aristotle, the Æther is the substance of the stars, where the soul comes from.

In Mythology, according to the ancient Greeks, this subtle fluid is a kind of prehistoric God. The personification of Heaven in its upper parts, where the air is purer & warmer and the "oxygen" of the gods (as opposed to the Ær, the "oxygen" of mortals).

In Poetry, it refers to celestial spaces. “But now I, a boat lost under the hair of coves, hurled by the hurricane into the bird-less ether, I, whose wreck, dead-drunk and sodden with water, neither monitor nor hanse ships would have fished up”- (Arthur Rimbaud The Drunken Boat, 1871).

In Chemistry, a very volatile spirit obtained by distilling a mixed acid with alcohol.

In Medicine, it refers to a colourless liquid with a characteristic odour, used in the industry as a solvent and in medicine as an antispasmodic, antiseptic and anaesthetic.

From its numerous definitions and meanings, the perfumes of Aether sums them up.