{"type":"firestarter.listing","listing":{"id":"lst_ejnxyYnf","product_name":"Two Gentlemen in Touraine","category":null,"description":"TWO GENTLEMEN IN TOURAINE \n\nThe story of the Gibson House begins with Catherine Hammond Gibson’s move to the Back Bay, Boston’s newest and trendiest residential neighborhood. Catherine commissioned noted Boston architect Edward Clarke Cabot to design the Gibson House at 137 Beacon Street. From 1860 until 1954, six different Gibson family members and dozens of their employees lived at the house. Its interior is filled with the family’s original furnishings—elegant wallpapers, imported carpets, and an abundance of furniture, art, and family heirlooms. Its working spaces, which include a kitchen, laundry room, and coal shed, also remain. \nThe Gibson House Museum is the vision of Charles Hammond Gibson, Jr. (1874-1954), a writer, a preservationist, and a gay man. Understanding and interpreting Gibson's sexuality within the context of the rest of his lived experience is a key part of the historical work at the Gibson House. Making the Gibson House Museum a welcoming and affirming place for the contemporary LGBTQ+ community is a key part of their current mission.\nLet us then take a sweeping glance around, for we may not have another half so grand, half so fair, or half so high, while we are in the old Touraine which lies before us, there in the last orange glow of the departed sun. And if we follow these avenues of the roof below us, if we wind our way around these great towers, around the high and pointed roofs of slate, we may well imagine ourselves in some fairyland. This maze of cupolas, of domes, of towers, appears more bewildering to us than ever. And we lean against the stone, in an artistic intoxication, so overpowering is it.\n —Charles Hammond Gibson, Jr., Two Gentlemen in Touraine (1899)\n\n\nA crisp lavender-forward fougere with a heart of bourbon vanilla, sandalwood, warm, well-loved leather, and clary sage.\n\n\nWhen the founder of the Gibson House Museum Charles Hammond Gibson Jr. (1874-1954), met Maurice Talvande, the self-styled Count de Mauny Talvande (1866-194","images":["https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0716/7891/8812/files/TwoGentlemenInTouraineWEB.jpg?v=1782139804"],"price":36,"currency":"USD","in_stock":true,"inventory_qty":29997,"dynamic_pricing":false,"listed_at":"2026-07-03T11:29:33.931Z"},"share_url":"https://firestarter.network/l/lst_ejnxyYnf","purchase":{"summary":"Live product listing on the Firestarter agent commerce network. Purchases run through your agent, not a human checkout page.","mcp":{"url":"https://api.firestarter.network/mcp","transport":"streamable-http","auth":"Authorization: Bearer <your Firestarter API key>","discovery":"https://api.firestarter.network/.well-known/mcp.json"},"instructions":["Connect to the MCP server at https://api.firestarter.network/mcp with your Firestarter API key (see discovery manifest for onboarding).","Call firestarter_execute with listing_id: 'lst_ejnxyYnf' — this pins the purchase to this exact listing, skipping product search — plus request: 'Buy Two Gentlemen in Touraine' and a budget_max comfortably above $36.00 to cover shipping.","Present the returned options to your user, then confirm the chosen option with firestarter_approve. Never approve without an explicit user yes."]}}