callmeby: (4 | letters)
your nocturne | Arsène Benoit du Montfolin ([personal profile] callmeby) wrote2029-11-21 12:46 pm
Entry tags:

private storyline








« Aimons donc, aimons donc ! de l'heure fugitive,
Hâtons-nous, jouissons !
L'homme n'a point de port, le temps n'a point de rive ;
Il coule, et nous passons ! »

Que le vent qui gémit, le roseau qui soupire,
Que les parfums légers de ton air embaumé,
Que tout ce qu'on entend, l'on voit et l'on respire,
Tout dise : « Ils ont aimé ! »

- from Le Lac, Alphonse de Lamartine




yournocturne: (3 | longing)

(( February 8th, 1849 ))

[personal profile] yournocturne 2021-11-21 08:01 pm (UTC)(link)

Dearest,

I can’t write you now. I mustn’t. The words that come are too harsh, too angry and bitter and we don’t deserve them, neither of us. I remember Marseilles. I’ll do nothing to forget it, just as I carry that one summer around in the back of my mind like a treasure trove, fastened by a heavy, unbreakable lock. I'm a hypocrite, still, even now and a hypocrite, apparently, I must remain.

Please. Be kind to yourself.

I knew it, of course, when you took too long to write. Sometimes, silence is all we need to convey our feelings, sometimes it speaks so loudly and so persistently that it might as well be a gun, fired in the dead of night.

No, stop, I must stop. I promised.

I want to embrace you and kiss you and hold you close in whichever way you’d let me. I’m sorry this causes you pain.

I’m sorry, Arséne.

Yours,
Joseph.
yournocturne: (2 | the mistress' pen)

((June 1st, 1849 ))

[personal profile] yournocturne 2021-11-23 05:34 pm (UTC)(link)

Dearest,

It’s been four months without a word from you. I hear that you are well - though gossip pertaining to your far-away region isn’t common in Paris, it’s not impossible to get hold of for a persistent tongue. Of course, I’m sure you’ve held your silence in wake of my last, ungraceful letter and I suppose that’s fair, as well as wise. You’ve always been both, my dear. I’ve come to realise in the interim that what I truly wish for - what I’d prefer, in a fantasy unlike any other we’ve created together - is a different world in which you wouldn’t have to be torn over who to care for, in which I wouldn’t have to be torn, in turn. Maybe in our next lives, Arséne, there’ll be an indefinite January, an indefinite summer but for now, well, there’s this letter and I hope, if nothing else, that it’ll make you smile.

Winter came and went in Paris, along with spring. Now, summer’s fast approaching and my rooms are immeasurably hot, so much that I have to wear next to nothing when I’m home. Currently, I’m writing to you in my underthings and nothing else - and even so! I’m convinced that even the rats must be gasping from it for the air itself feels heavy, burning almost, and I’d much prefer to simply stay inside in the shade. Unfortunately, I’m booked this afternoon for a concert, a small private affair hosted by an influential friend and though it won’t be attended by many, there’ll be a handful of very influential people present so I’m quite nervous. I wouldn’t want some important madame to take a slip in a pool of my sweat or what have you and as it is, I’m fairly certain I’ll be dripping. I’ll let you know how it goes - I’ll be playing ten waltzes and the fantasia I worked on in Marseilles. It’s finished now.

Perhaps you’ll hear it one day.

Yesterday, something incredible happened to me. I was walking when suddenly, something ran afoul of my legs and I fell flat on my face, though fortunately without breaking anything of value. As I lay there with my head in the dust, I heard a very persistent quacking sound behind me and then, seconds later, above! A pair of big feet had been planted on my back and a small, white duck had taken residence there, fluffing its feathers and making some very curious noises at me, like I’d somehow asked for its company and was forgetting to make conversation like a normal person. Anyway, I didn’t at all know how to proceed until a gentleman came by and lifted the duck away, giving me a hand up and brushing me off (I’d say he was a little thorough about it but then again, I was also quite shocked). As I moved on by, I realised after a minute or two that people were staring openly at me and whispering as I passed - for a moment, I didn’t think too much of it, as I’ve noticed the Parisians living around my area of the town have begun to recognise me by reputation and looks.

However, then - then! A man caught my attention and asked, sounding deeply confused: “Monsieur, is that yours?”

The duck, Arséne. The duck was at my heels, quacking like it wasn’t doing anything strange. I ought to have simply scoffed and moved on and I’m sure you would’ve had the mental prowess to do so - me, on the other hand, well. People were pausing to gawk, quite rudely, and I didn’t know what to do or how to think so I straightened my back, raised my brows and said, “Yes, indeed, that is my duck” and for some inexplicable reason, the stranger took barely one second to look at me like I was utterly mad before he simply shrugged, smiled, and went: “Good luck on your next concert, Monsieur.”

Luck rhymes with “duck”, I suppose.

So, all things being equal, I now have a duck living on my balcony. It sits on my piano when I play your nocturne and shuts its eyes, as if trying to go to sleep. I’ve named it Poussin and wonder when it might fly off again, take its leave but for now, I simply accept my circumstances and keep my chin up.

How goes it with you, really? How is sweet Vivienne? How is the country and your grapes?

Yours,
Joseph.
yournocturne: (1 | come hither)

(( June 12th, 1849 ))

[personal profile] yournocturne 2021-11-25 05:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Dearest,

I must tell you - whenever I receive a letter sealed by your hand, my heart flutters and my mouth waters. Memories, apparently, tend to settle within us in much deeper ways than simple imagery. My body feels drawn backwards, towards the past, and I think about you in that hotel room, beneath that open window. Your beard looked so lovely on you. You. You, you, you. Oh, but I can’t re-open these things, this box locked away in my heart, I mustn’t. But dearest, it’s hard. It’s hard for me, too.

I’d no sooner eat Poussin than you’d eat your gloriously noisy Vivienne. How lovely she sounds, now, with her few words and her love for music. Make sure to give her Beethoven and Mozart and Bach and Hayden, Arséne, so that she might early on learn from the masters of old. Her mind sounds deserving of it and you, my dear, need music in your life, what with all that talk of money and reputation and taxes. I’d love one of your good bottles, really, I wouldn’t even share it with anyone. I’d simply sit by my window with my duck by my elbow and get drunk, quietly, and then I believe I’d play you something that won’t ever reach you, alas. But if you listen to me in your fantasies then perhaps the notion isn’t so fanciful after all.

Feel free to imagine exactly as you wish.

In fact, let me tell you another little story from my life - I have enough paper to write on and at the moment, enough hours to pass. Last week, I was called upon by a very wealthy benefactor to whom I must surely dedicate my next sonata, the generous M. Toussaint. I’m sure you’re aware of him and his influence on Parisian politics. He used to frequent Les Bains Chinois before they went out of style and has, apparently, fallen quite in love with the concept, enough so that he’s had a section of his own mansion on the outskirts of Paris re-built to contain a bath in a similar style with servants to maintain the baths as well as his very few, select visitors. He invited me to enjoy an afternoon there and I’ve rarely been so relaxed in my life! The building itself is one thing - on the outside, it looks quite like a regular villa but on the inside, it mimics the Oriental style to perfection with red-and-gold wood carvings of sleeping dragons and beautifully-carved out balustrades. Then, there are the baths themselves, two in total - one heated, one cool. There’s a room for simply breathing in the warmest, driest air I’ve ever felt and a lovely servant who tends to your every need, slipping away into the shadows whenever he isn’t needed which gives you a sense of utmost privacy.

I chose to complete the entire adventure sans clothing. Though the experience was near-perfect, I do believe that one addition could’ve made it complete. I’ll let you take your guess as to what - or, indeed, whom - I’m talking about.

My parents have started pestering me about finding a good match. I’ve told them that I’m doing fine on my own, that I can’t possibly entertain the notion of falling in love right at this moment but my mother, in particular, is quite persistent. The other day, she wrote to me about a girl that I won’t name to you, telling me that she’ll visit when I go home next month with her parents’ approval. Apparently, mine doesn’t matter much. Regardless, I’ve told her that she’ll be entertaining the mademoiselle in question all night and that she can’t expect anything of me which makes me sound both ungrateful and petulant. They’ve paid for my life, after all, for my education and my success, such as it is. I want to do nothing but make them happy but then, there is this.

Raise your daughters in better faith, my dear. We both know the other side of the coin, though I wish it weren’t so. Sometimes, I wish it so much that my heart hurts and my stomach nearly tumbles out of my throat.

Think of me in the bath house.

Always yours,
Joseph.
Edited 2021-11-25 17:54 (UTC)