Eight people, all strangers to each other, are invited to Indian Island, off the English coast. Vera Claythorne, a former governess, thinks she has been hired as a secretary; Philip Lombard, an adventurer, and William Blore, an ex-detective, think they have been hired to look out for trouble over the weekend; Dr. Armstrong thinks he has been hired to look after the wife of the island’s owner. Emily Brent, General Macarthur, Tony Marston, and Judge Wargrave think they are going to visit old friends.
When they arrive on the island, the guests are greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Rogers, the butler and housekeeper, who report that the host, someone they call Mr. Owen, will not arrive until the next day. That evening, as all the guests gather in the drawing room after an excellent dinner, they hear a recorded voice accusing each of them of a specific murder committed in the past and never uncovered. They compare notes and realize that none of them, including the servants, knows “Mr. Owen,” which suggests that they were brought here according to someone’s strange plan.
As they discuss what to do, Tony Marston chokes on poisoned whiskey and dies. Frightened, the party retreats to bed, where almost everyone is plagued by guilt and memories of their crimes. Vera Claythorne notices the similarity between the death of Marston and the first verse of a nursery rhyme, “Ten Little Indians,” that hangs in each bedroom.
The next morning the guests find that Mrs. Rogers apparently died in her sleep. The guests hope to leave that morning, but the boat that regularly delivers supplies to the island does not show up. Blore, Lombard, and Armstrong decide that the deaths must have been murders and determine to scour the island in search of the mysterious Mr. Owen. They find no one, however. Meanwhile, the oldest guest, General Macarthur, feels sure he is going to die and goes to look out at the ocean. Before lunch, Dr. Armstrong finds the general dead of a blow to the head.
The remaining guests meet to discuss their situation. They decide that one of them must be the killer. Many make vague accusations, but Judge Wargrave reminds them that the existing evidence suggests any of them could be the killer. Afternoon and dinner pass restlessly, and everyone goes to bed, locking his or her door before doing so. The next morning, they find that Rogers has been killed while chopping wood in preparation for breakfast. At this point, the guests feel sure the murders are being carried out according to the dictates of the nursery rhyme. Also, they realize that the dining-room table initially featured ten Indian figures, but with each death one of the figures disappears.
After breakfast, Emily Brent feels slightly giddy, and she remains alone at the table for a while. She is soon found dead, her neck having been injected with poison. At this point, Wargrave initiates an organized search of everyone’s belongings, and anything that could be used as a weapon is locked away. The remaining guests sit together, passing time and casting suspicious looks at each other. Finally, Vera goes to take a bath, but she is startled by a piece of seaweed hanging from her ceiling and cries out. Blore, Lombard, and Armstrong run to help her, only to return downstairs to find Wargrave draped in a curtain that resembles courtroom robes and bearing a red mark on his forehead. Armstrong examines the body and reports that Wargrave has been shot in the head.
That night, Blore hears footsteps in the hall; upon checking, he finds that Armstrong is not in his room. Blore and Lombard search for Armstrong, but they cannot find him anywhere in the
reservations. Most of them are marginalized and treated as inferior to others; however, we are all human beings with blood through the veins, dreams, hopes and feelings. In the Ten Little Indian by Sherman Alexie can find a series of stories that allow us to know more about their culture, ideas and thoughts of the Indians, who in spite of being of the same origin or tribe, have different ways of living and seeing life. All humans have similarities that make us unique in our own species, but we also…
story, “And Then There Were None” By, Agatha Christie, the poem “Ten Little Indian Boys” helped the murderer figure out how each person will die. One by one, people on the island started to drop like flies. The whole situation is a whole big mystery that no one seemed to be able to figure out. The “Ten Little Indian Boys” nursery rhyme had a huge part in each death on the island. The first person to die was Antony Marston. The first Indian in the rhyme died of choking. Choking is a symbolization of Marston…
Plot Summary Eight strangers are lured to the mysterious Indian Island. Some of them believes that they've been invited by an old friend - one that they can't contact to confirm the invitation. The rest have been hired by a mysterious employer. Once they arrive at the Island they meet the last two 'guests', the husband and wife butler-cook team. In each of their rooms is a poem entitled 'Ten Little Indians' which tells the story of ten Indian boys who die in unusual fashions. A conversation between…
Florida in 1527. Under attack from Florida's Indians, Cabeza de Vaca and a number of other men sailed a makeshift barge westward, hoping to find a Spanish settlement in Mexico. Along the way, the men became the first Europeans to cross the mouth of the Mississippi River. Cabeza de Vaca and eighty Spanish castaways landed on Galveston Island, along the Texas coast. For the next eight years, he and other survivors travelled overland, living with various Indian tribes, sometimes as slaves and at times…
reflecting their culture with different visual elements, techniques, and symbolism. Though the artworks from these three cultures differentiate in some ways, the viewer will find that they also have some similar features in their art work. The Indian culture itself reflects almost transparently through its artworks from the patterns, to the use of colors, and stories the works tell. The base and media of the artwork from India isn’t specific, overtime, it evolved from rock paintings, to paintings…
amazing explorer, which found the Americas and made friends with the Indians. But today my whole perspective on him was flipped. We learned that he slaughtered and objectified the Arawak Indians and took over their land. All I used to know about Christopher Columbus was that he sailed three ships to the Americas not knowing what to expect. He sailed there and found Native Americans inhabited it. Columbus learned and traded with the Indians and then went back to Spain and reported his findings. Today…
BATTLE OF LITTLE BIGHORN In late 1875, Sioux and Cheyenne Indians defiantly left their reservations, outraged over the continued intrusions of whites into their sacred lands in the Black Hills. They gathered in Montana with the great warrior Sitting Bull to fight for their lands. The following spring, two victories over the US Cavalry emboldened them to fight on in the summer of 1876.i think that we did a good job on defeating custer cause if it wasn’t for us we would be wiped out, even if we just…
Ch. 31 and 32 Indians were planning to escape their masters and be on their own. Once they were on their own they lived off pear juice and rain water. On their journey they rain into other Indians who welcomed them. They called themselves Avavares who spoke a different language. Ch. 33 and 34 People came to Castillo telling them about their headaches and cramps and he offered it to God as each of the men gave up something. The men were cured. The Indians wander in the woods for five days trying…
They are given little freedom in choices, and often find it difficult to enter the workforce from this point, but still there are some which do. Women which do manage to enter the workforce, often do so because they need it economically, and not because they really desire…
Reverend Earl Little Louise Little Elijah Muhammad Time period: 1960’s Plot: African-American leader, Malcom X, converts to the Islamic Religion. He travels and preaches The Islamic religion to others as also including in racism in his preaching’s and how it needs to stop. He explains that even though people are black they are still people everyone is the same origin called human kind. Film summary: Malcolm X was an African American leader. He was born with the name Malcolm Little, after his father…