Author picture

Marguerite Porete (1250–1310)

Author of The Mirror of Simple Souls

2+ Works 287 Members 4 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Works by Marguerite Porete

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Porette, Marguerite
Birthdate
1250
Date of death
1310-06-01
Gender
female
Nationality
France
Birthplace
Hainault, Belgium
Place of death
Paris, France
Cause of death
burned at the stake
Places of residence
Valenciennes, France
Occupations
mystic
writer
poet
Short biography
Marguerite Porete was born in the county of Hainault in present-day Belgium, around 1248 or 1250. Not much else is known about her early life except that she began her spiritual life as a Béguine. These were lay Catholic women who lived in communal dwellings with other women devoted to the religious life, but did not take formal vows of as a nun. Marguerite is remembered today as the author of the mystical book Mirouer des simples ames anienties (Mirror of Simple Souls), written around 1300. It was structured as a dialogue between personified characters such as Love, Virtue, Reason, and the Soul, a common trope in medieval religious texts. Through the person of Love, Marguerite explored the idea of radical annihilation of the self to experience the divine while still alive. At some time between 1296 and 1306, the Bishop of Cambrai declared the Mirror heretical and ordered all copies of it to be burned in the public square of Valenciennes. Marguerite objected and sent the book to three other theological authorities for their approval. Even though they agreed that the Mirror was technically within the guidelines of the Church, Marguerite and her book were brought before William of Paris, the Grand Inquisitor of France. After a lengthy trial, during which she refused to recant her views, she was found guilty of heresy and burned at the stake.

Members

Reviews

Not So Simple
Review of the Echo Point Books & Media, LLC Kindle eBook (December 19, 2022) of the original English language hardcover (1927) of a 15th Century English language manuscript as translated by the anonymous N.M. from the French language original "Le miroir des âmes simples et anéanties : Et qui seulement demeurent en vouloir et désir d'Amour" (The Mirror of the Simple Souls Who Are Annihilated and Remain Only in Will and Desire of Love) (c. 1306).

Jesu, pray for us.
Sigh and sorrow deeply:
Mourn and weep inwardly:
Pray and think devoutly:
Love and long continually.


Let me say right at the start here that the 2-star rating applies only to the original 1927 edition and any of its later reprints/reissues. That edition was prepared on the basis of the discovery of one of the 15th century English translation manuscripts found in the British Library in 1911. At that time, it was thought that the 14th Century French language original was lost and also that it was written by a man. It was not until 1946 that the writer was identified as Marguerite Porete (c. 13th Century - 1310). Porete had been condemned as a heretic by the Church and was burned at the stake in Paris in 1310 and her book was banned.

See print at https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f4/De_baghine_Des_dodes_dantz_L...
A print of a Beguine mystic as Marguerite Porete is assumed to have been. Image sourced from the Wikipedia article on Porete (as linked above).

The 1927 edition provides some minimal notes although much of it will be confusing to a non-informed in Christian mysticism reader such as myself. The archaic English is confusing and often repetitive. The commentary by the 15th Century translator known only by the initials N.M. does not help at all, it is a sort of Ignotum per ignotius, where the explanation is even more confusing than the thing it is meant to explain.

I recommend getting any of the later translations which were made after the discovery of a copy of the original French language manuscript. For example, the description synopsis of the University of Notre Dame edition The Mirror of Simple Souls (1999) makes it sound quite authoritative.

Soundtrack, Trivia and Links
I read this edition of The Mirror of Simple Souls due to its being cheaply and easily available. I should have done more research before choosing it. I sought it out after coming home from a performance by Canadian modern dance icon Louise Lecavalier of her recent work Stations. Lecavalier discussed in the post-show Q&A how part of her dance work had been inspired by her reading of Marguerite Porete.

See photograph at https://scontent-ord5-2.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t39.30808-6/405647168_25190288100569971_7...
Louise Lecavalier at a post-show Q&A at the Toronto Harbourfront Fleck Dance Theatre in November 2023.

See photograph at https://th.bing.com/th/id/OIP.LZigHE2ossZYjX-JASxKSwHaE8?w=272&h=181&c=7...
Louise Lecavalier in rehearsal with David Bowie in the late 1980s. Screengrab from YouTube.

I don't know how well known Lecavalier is internationally, but in the late 1980s she did several videos and live performances with David Bowie, some of which are collaged in this Heroes 3-Language Megamix. It includes her trademark 360° full-body barrel-roll jump which is seen repeated several times.
… (more)
 
Flagged
alanteder | 3 other reviews | Dec 16, 2023 |
This masterpiece of Christian apophatic mysticism is notable for also containing a high degree of affective content. It includes elements of Boethian allegory and draws on the literary tradition of courtly love, while describing the annihilation and apotheosis of the Soul in a set of visionary conversations. Church authorities considered its contents to be dangerously heretical because of the antinomian idea (sometimes connected with the heresy of the Free Spirit) that the mystic who attains to annihilation has desire free from sin, and thus may exercise his or her will without constraint.

"And therefore I say to all that no-one who understands as I do will understand this book unless he understands it by the strength of Faith and the Power of Love, who are my mistresses, for I obey them in all things. And then too, says Reason, I want to say this: that whoever has these two strings to his bow, that is the light of Faith and the power of Love, he has permission to do whatever pleases him, and the witness of this is Love herself, who says to the Soul: Beloved, love, and do what you will." (30) This text thus manifests a link in the germination of Thelema between Augustine's Dilige et quod vis fac ("Love, and do what you will") and Colonna's Trahit sua quemque voluptas ("Let each follow his own pleasure").

Marguerite was burnt at the stake for heresy in 1310, less than a month after the similar execution of fifty-four Knights Templar. Her book had been incinerated earlier, but she persisted in authorizing its distribution. After her death, it was sufficiently prized by its readers that they continued to circulate it sub rosa, and it was not reconnected to her authorship until the middle of the twentieth century. In the meanwhile it was influential on other mystics including Eckhart and Ruysbroek.

Porete's idea of annihilation bears fruitful comparison with the Sufi doctrine of fana. Thelemites will be well-advised to study The Mirror of Simple Souls in connection with Liber CLXVI and its related rituals and attainments.
… (more)
5 vote
Flagged
paradoxosalpha | 3 other reviews | May 4, 2011 |

Lists

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
2
Also by
3
Members
287
Popularity
#81,379
Rating
4.0
Reviews
4
ISBNs
24
Languages
5
Favorited
2

Charts & Graphs