Unbound, Unnameable: Desire and Dissolution in Marguerite Porete’s Mirror
“Love has no why,
and the soul who loves has no need to ask.
She is unbound. She neither wills nor does not will,
for she is held, wholly,
in the embrace of Love’s will.”
— Marguerite Porete, The Mirror of Simple Souls (Le Mirouer des simples âmes anéanties), c. 1290–1306Marguerite Porete was a French beguine and mystic whose treatise The Mirror of Simple Souls was deemed so radical by the ecclesiastical authorities that she was executed for heresy in 1310. Her crime? Writing of a soul — cast as feminine — that is so wholly annihilated in divine love that she transcends all ecclesiastical structures, all moral effort, all binaries of obedience and disobedience.
In The Mirror, the Soul speaks of surrendering to Love in terms that are profoundly erotic, emotional, and ecstatic. She ceases to act, chooses no longer to will anything: she becomes, instead, a vessel of divine flow, suspended in the arms of a lover who is not God-the-Father, but Love itself.
This language of annihilation and passivity has often been interpreted theologically, but for many queer readers of the Ace community, it also evokes the erasure of normative identity and the longing for unbounded intimacy without phisicality, beyond rules, beyond roles. The soul here is gendered and desiring, but also liberated from social constraints: free of “why,” living in a logic outside law and structure. The beguine movement itself was often a refuge for women who lived independently, formed spiritual partnerships, and resisted patriarchal control.
Porete’s words survived after her condemnation, smuggled, copied anonymously, and eventually rediscovered centuries later. Today, her text is recognized not only as a masterpiece of mystical literature, but also as a queer devotional document, where love is surrender, loss is freedom, and identity is porous, radiant, and unnameable.







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