%0 Journal Article %T Between Vice and Virtue: The Mondain’s Difficult Path  in Jean-Pierre Camus Palombe, ou la femme honorable %A Pawłowska, Maja %J Santander Art and Culture Law Review %V 2018 %R 10.4467/2450050XSNR.18.008.9769 %N 1/2018 (4) %P 131-140 %K Jean-Pierre Camus, roman dévot (pious romance), Palombe, ou la femme honorable, libertinage, French 17th century novel %@ 2391-7997 %D 2018 %U https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/saaclr/article/pomiedzy-wystepkiem-a-cnota-trudna-droga-czlowieka-swiatowego-w-powiesci-jean-pierre-camusa-palombe-ou-la-femme-honorable %X Published in 1625, Palombe, ou la femme honorable, is a novel by Jean-Pierre Camus showing the model of a mondain, or worldly, Christian. With the example of count Fulgent, an immoral rake, who undergoes a spiritual transformation, Camus demonstrates that even a libertine courtesan can become a good Christian. However, such coexistence is possible only for those who have achieved spiritual maturity and who can distinguish vice from virtue, consciously renouncing immorality. Camus represents the marriage of mondains not as a source of pleasure or opportunity for a libertine lifestyle, but rather as a contract demanding certain commitments and renouncements. On entering marriage, Fulgent is not initially morally prepared for the social position and responsibilities that he must assume. He only becomes a good husband and Christian once he accepts the commitments of his social position, This is indeed how Camus defines virtue: as a conscious renouncement of licentiousness and a conscious acceptance of duties imposed by society. To turn back from the path of debauchery is a slow and difficult process, just as it is to learn to fulfil one’s moral duties.