Skip to main content

Justice & Law Quote by Boethius

"Who would give a law to lovers? Love is unto itself a higher law"

About this Quote

“Who would give a law to lovers?” lands like a courtroom heckle, but Boethius isn’t just being romantic. He’s staging a clash between two kinds of order: the external, enforceable kind (statutes, social expectations, even moral bookkeeping) and the internal, self-justifying kind that love claims to be. The second sentence tightens the screw: love is “a higher law,” not lawless, but governed by something more sovereign than human rules.

That phrasing matters. “Give a law” implies law as a gift from authority downward. Lovers, in Boethius’ framing, don’t receive love as a civic ordinance; they enter a relation whose legitimacy comes from within the experience itself. It’s a strategic elevation: love becomes not a plea for exception but a competing jurisdiction. That’s the subtextual swagger - love doesn’t ask permission because it answers to a different court.

Context sharpens the edge. Boethius, writing in late antiquity and haunted by the volatility of fortune, is obsessed with what can remain stable when institutions collapse and punishments arrive. In The Consolation of Philosophy, “higher” goods are those less vulnerable to political whim. To cast love as higher law is to align it with the philosophical project of ranking values: what deserves obedience when the world’s rules are cruel, inconsistent, or corrupt?

It’s also a quiet critique of moralizing control. If you can legislate love, it isn’t love; it’s compliance wearing perfume. Boethius isn’t defending reckless appetite so much as insisting that the deepest bonds operate by an ethic thicker than regulation: voluntary, self-binding, and meaningful precisely because no one can coerce it into being.

Quote Details

TopicLove
SourceHelp us find the source
CiteCite this Quote

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Boethius. (n.d.). Who would give a law to lovers? Love is unto itself a higher law. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-would-give-a-law-to-lovers-love-is-unto-120996/

Chicago Style
Boethius. "Who would give a law to lovers? Love is unto itself a higher law." FixQuotes. Accessed February 2, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-would-give-a-law-to-lovers-love-is-unto-120996/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Who would give a law to lovers? Love is unto itself a higher law." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-would-give-a-law-to-lovers-love-is-unto-120996/. Accessed 2 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Boethius Add to List
Who Would Give a Law to Lovers Love Is Unto Itself a Higher Law
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Boethius is a Philosopher from Rome.

5 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Plautus, Playwright
Plautus