Atemporal transits in the narrative of the soul - Notes for the study of Maria Gabriela Llansol is a compilation of six articles resulting from post-doctoral research in Literature and Philosophy. The corpus of the study is the novel In the House of July and August (1984). The first articles deal with Plato's arguments for the immortality of the soul, making comparisons with the research object analysed. The study had a brief swing through historical time and its successive turns, the eternal return. This was followed by an investigation of medieval beguinages, eccentric places that are rarely referred to historically, but which are of great value because of what they represented in the lives of people and, above all, of many women in this period of history. The idea of a woman opening the doors of her house to welcome the sisters paved the way for sorority. Free women worked there, gave charity, read, wrote and dedicated themselves to the arts, until they were seen by the greedyeyes of the Inquisition. Then the research took the path of language, travelling through the diaphanous and uncontainable transits of writing and, finally, hermeneutics finished the writing, cutting the thread of the pure word, through the bias of interpretation.