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Ch. 4: The Famous Koh-I-Nor Diamond

Ch. 4: The Famous Koh-I-Nor Diamond Page of 278 Ch. 4: The Famous Koh-I-Nor Diamond Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
106
THE KOH-I-NUR.
strong; it was scarcely probable therefore that it would remain for any length of time in the feeble grasp of this child. Indeed, his elevation . upon the throne of Lahore was a signal for all sorts of intrigues and machinations on the part both of those who were in power and wished to keep it, and of those who were out of power but wished to acquire it.
In the midst of all this turmoil a new and hardier race appears upon the scene. Lord Dalhousie annexes Lahore, and the English flag floats for the first time over the Koh-i-nur.
In March, 1849, the king of Lahore was for­mally deposed. The scene was short and busi­ness-like, very different from the stately Oriental silence between Runjeet Singh and Shah Shuja on the occasion of the last change of allegiance made by the fickle diamond. A crowd of natives, without arms or jewels, a few English officers, a man reading the proclamation in Hin­dustani, Persian and English, the boy-king af­fixing his seal to the paper with careless haste
Ch. 4: The Famous Koh-I-Nor Diamond Page of 278 Ch. 4: The Famous Koh-I-Nor Diamond
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