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A short story by Pauline E. Hopkins, first published in the October 1900 issue of ''The Colored American Magazine''. It is often cited as the first African-American mystery story.

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A "Talma Gordon" is a short story by Pauline E. Hopkins, Hopkins that was first published in the October 1900 issue of ''The Colored American Magazine''. It is often cited as the first African-American mystery story.

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[[quoteright:280:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/15oct_00cover.png]]



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The story can be read [[http://coloredamerican.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/CAM_1.5_1900.10.pdf here]].

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The story can be read [[http://coloredamerican.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/CAM_1.5_1900.10.pdf here]].[[note]]You can jump straight to the story by clicking its listing in the table of contents.[[/note]]
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* PosthumousCharacter: Some of the people involved in Thornton's story were either dead by the time it began (e.g. Isabel) or are dead by the present day (e.g. the murder victims).

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--->We may make laws, but laws are but straws in the hands of Omnipotence.
---->"There's a divinity that shapes our ends,\\
Rough-hew them how we will."
--->And no man may combat fate.

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--->We may make laws, but laws are but straws in the hands of Omnipotence.
---->"There's
Omnipotence.\\
"There's
a divinity that shapes our ends,\\
Rough-hew them how we will."
--->And
"\\
And
no man may combat fate.



Ever varying Madeline,"
--->quoted a celebrated writer as he stood apart with me, gazing upon the scene before us.

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Ever varying Madeline,"
--->quoted
Madeline,"\\
quoted
a celebrated writer as he stood apart with me, gazing upon the scene before us.

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A short story by Pauline E. Hopkins, first published in the October 1900 issue of ''The Colored American Magazine''. It is often cited as the first African-American mystery story.

A gentlemen's club is meeting at the home of one Dr. William Thornton. The topic of interracial marriage comes up, and the doctor says he believes it to be inevitable. To illustrate his point, he begins to tell them about an incident that occurred some years ago -- the murders of Captain Jonathan Gordon and his wife and young son.

The story can be read [[http://coloredamerican.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/CAM_1.5_1900.10.pdf here]].
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!!Contains examples of:
* CharacterTitle: The story is titled after one of its central characters.
* ChocolateBaby: [[spoiler:Isabel's third child was born with dark skin. Captain Gordon assumed she had been unfaithful, but it was actually from inherited genes on her side.]]
* DeathbedConfession: [[spoiler:Simon Cameron confesses to the Gordon murders on his deathbed, dying a few hours later.]]
* DeadManWriting: After Jeannette dies, Talma receives a letter from her which begins: "MY DARLING SISTER TALMA: When you read these lines I shall be no more..."
* DeathByChildbirth: Isabel, the first wife of Captain Gordon and mother of Jeannette and Talma, died at the birth of her third child.
* DeathByDespair:
** Jeannette dies a year after the murder trial, the stress having taken its toll on her.
** Isabel died after birthing her third child. [[spoiler:Captain Gordon's raving accusations upon seeing the child's appearance were apparently too much for her after the stress of childbirth -- she fell into convulsions and died soon after.]]
** Near the end, [[spoiler:Talma comes close to this; her emotional suffering causes her health to fail rapidly.]]
* DisinheritedChild: After Captain Gordon's murder, it comes to light that he planned to leave his daughters only a small annuity, the bulk of his fortune going to his son.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: Talma's first appearance in the story is at the garden party, where a few paragraphs are spent focusing on her, establishing her as lovely and talented through others' descriptions and conversations about her.
* EveryoneLovesBlondes: Talma is blonde and draws admiration at the garden party.
* FamilyExtermination: Captain Gordon, Mrs. Gordon, and their baby son are killed together.
* FramingDevice: Dr. Thornton is telling the story of the Gordons to guests at his house.
* {{Greed}}: Captain Gordon committed many terrible deeds out of desire for money.
-->Gold was his idol; and many a good man walked the plank, and many a gallant ship was stripped of her treasure, to satisfy his lust for gold.
* HeKnowsTooMuch: [[spoiler:Cameron's father was killed by Captain Gordon after helping him bury his treasure to keep the location secret. Cameron notes that this was a custom among pirates.]]
* HostileWeather: A brief but intense storm looses a lightning strike that sets fire to the tower where Captain Gordon and his wife and son are sleeping.
* InheritanceMurder: When it's discovered that Captain Gordon intended to leave the bulk of his fortune to his son and only a small annuity for his daughters Talma and Jeannette, that the will and other papers were missing, and that Talma and her father had a terrible fight over her lover, it's assumed that she was responsible for his murder, since no one would have so much to gain from it as her and her sister. [[spoiler:Later it turns out Jeannette had ''planned'' to murder him for the inheritance, but someone else got to him first, so she gathered the papers and fled.]]
* InnocentBlueEyes: Talma has blue eyes and is described in ways evoking innocence -- at the garden party, she is merry, wears white, and is compared to a flower.
* ItWasADarkAndStormyNight: After the initial setup and introductions, the plot kicks off with a storm that arrives in the middle of the night. Within Thornton's story, it's the second scene.
* JacobAndEsau: Jeannette and Talma Gordon. Jeannette is described as taking after their father, and Talma their mother.
* NestedStory: The story gets three levels in at its deepest -- Thornton narrating reading Jeannette's letter, in which she relays her father's story as told from his perspective.
* OneDropRule: [[spoiler:Though Isabel is only one-16th black and her daughters one-32nd, it's enough for them to be discriminated against by those who know the truth.]]
* ParentalMarriageVeto: Capt. Gordon vehemently opposed the idea of Talma marrying Edward Turner. [[spoiler:At first it seems like it was because he was a poor nobody, but when the truth about Talma's mother Isabel Franklin is revealed, it's apparent that her ancestry was the reason.]]
* SecretPath: The murderer used a secret path [[spoiler:to reach Captain Gordon's chambers from the shore, which only the Captain and trusted members of his crew knew about.]]
* ShoutOut:
** Dr. Thornton quotes ''Theatre/{{Hamlet}}'' while giving his thoughts on intermarriage to illustrate that he believes it to be inevitable.
--->We may make laws, but laws are but straws in the hands of Omnipotence.
---->"There's a divinity that shapes our ends,\\
Rough-hew them how we will."
--->And no man may combat fate.
** A writer watching Talma at the garden party quotes [[Creator/AlfredLordTennyson Tennyson]]'s "Madeline" to express his admiration.
--->"Smiling, frowning, evermore,\\
Thou art perfect in love-lore,\\
Ever varying Madeline,"
--->quoted a celebrated writer as he stood apart with me, gazing upon the scene before us.
* SiblingYinYang: The Gordon sisters. Jeannette is described as tall, dark, and stern, and Talma as a fairylike blonde, sparkling in smiles.
* SmokyGentlemensClub: The Canterbury Club of Boston's members are of high social standing. Aside from Dr. Thornton, they include a jurist/politician, a theologian, and a college president.
* TwoAliasesOneCharacter: At the end, [[spoiler:Dr. Thornton's hitherto unseen wife, who was mentioned only briefly at the start, is revealed to be none other than Talma herself.]]
* WantedASonInstead: Capt. Gordon was disappointed at the births of his daughters because he wanted a male heir.
* WhiteAngloSaxonProtestant: The Gordons are described as old New England Puritans who had come over in the ''Mayflower''.
* WickedStepmother: Captain Gordon's second wife Mary treats Jeannette and Talma, the daughters of his first wife, with contempt and speaks badly of their mother. It's said that she envies the inheritance that the first Mrs. Gordon left her daughters.
* WouldHurtAChild: Captain Gordon's killer kills not only the Captain and his wife, but also their baby son.
* YouKilledMyFather: [[spoiler:The man known as Simon Cameron killed Captain Gordon to avenge his father, a crew member of Gordon's who was killed by him after helping him bury his treasure [[HeKnowsTooMuch to keep the location secret]].]]
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