fey
FAY
Peculiar, otherworldly — the joyous, reckless abandon that comes at the heights, as if altitude dissolves ordinary caution. In Scots tradition, fey also means fated, doomed — the strange elation of someone about to die. The mountain gives both meanings simultaneously.
Etymology
Scots and Old English: fǣge (fated to die). The shift from doom to ecstasy happened in Scottish usage, where the word absorbed the strangeness of both states.
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