Kohinoor Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Kohinoor. Here they are! All 14 of them:

With love you could persuade a Pathan to go to Hell, but by force you couldn't even take him to Heaven.
Manreet Sodhi Someshwar (The Hunt for Kohinoor (Mehrunisa Trilogy, #2))
Eventually, there is one principle, and one principle alone on which the world is hinged: things will work out the way they should, provided we do what we should.
Manreet Sodhi Someshwar (The Hunt for Kohinoor (Mehrunisa Trilogy, #2))
Intelligence is built on deception. Trust nothing. Not even the mirror.
Manreet Sodhi Someshwar (The Hunt for Kohinoor (Mehrunisa Trilogy, #2))
Where it concerned history, she saw things that people seldom did.
Manreet Sodhi Someshwar (The Hunt for Kohinoor (Mehrunisa Trilogy, #2))
As a minority, no sooner do you learn to polish and cherish one chip on your shoulder, it’s taken off you and swapped out for another. The jewellery of your struggles is forever on loan, like the Koh-i-Noor. You are intermittently handed this Necklace of labels to hang around your neck,
Nikesh Shukla (The Good Immigrant)
flaunting the Kohinoor on the Queen Mother’s crown in the Tower of London is a powerful reminder of the injustices perpetrated by the former imperial power. Until it is returned—at least as a symbolic gesture of expiation—it will remain evidence of the loot, plunder and misappropriation that colonialism was really all about. Perhaps that is the best argument for leaving the Kohinoor where it emphatically does not belong—in British hands.
Shashi Tharoor (An Era of Darkness: The British Empire in India)
The CIA has a great reputation and a terrible record. It relies on machines, not men, to understand the other side. They counted Soviet weapons with spy satellites but never figured that in the meantime communism was crumbling. They poured billions into Afghanistan to give the Russians their Vietnam – which they did, only by ending up breeding an entirely new menace, the Islamic jihadis. They claimed the existence of WMD in Iraq and provided a war-mongering President with a pretext for war. Want me to go on?’ Harry snorted.
Manreet Sodhi Someshwar (The Hunt for Kohinoor (Mehrunisa Trilogy, #2))
Koh-i-noor in a limestone-quarry as an article of that character
Albert Jay Nock (Memoirs of a Superfluous Man (LvMI))
A man of tao remains ordinary, absolutely ordinary. Nobody knows who he is, nobody knows what he carries within him, what treasure. He never advertises, he never tries to display. Why do we advertise? Because of the ego. You are not satisfied with yourself. You are satisfied only when others appreciate you. Kohinoor is not enough. You may have a valuable stone, but it is not enough; others must appreciate it.
Osho
Holy, holy, holy”, seems written on every page. To talk of comparing the Bible with other “sacred books” so-called, such as the Koran, the Shasters, or the book of Mormon, is positively absurd. You might as well compare the sun with a rushlight, or Skiddaw with a mole hill, or St. Paul’s with an Irish hovel, or the Portland vase with a garden pot, or the Koh-i-noor diamond with a bit of glass.
J.C. Ryle (Old Paths)
The world-famous diamond Kohinoor was found at Kolleru in the present Guntur district.
Panduranga Reddy Lingala (An Exposition of Reddy Race)
The Kali Yuga will start from Agathiya Mountain Tamilnadu, Lord Vishnu sword will be manifested there only, Sword which is protected by British in Russia will be of use, Because even if India requests they will never ever return it back, just like Kohinoor diamond, gone is gone
Ganapathy K
The Kohinoor diamond, radiant symbol of the power of the Moghul Empire, had, with the annexation of the Punjab in 1849, been quietly palmed into future Chief Commissioner John Lawrence's waistcoat pocket. From there it was sent to London to be shown at the Great Exhibition in 185I, recut by Garrard's, the fashionable London jewellers, then set in the very centre of Queen Victoria's crown. In 1656, when it had been presented to Shah Jehan, the Kohinoor had weighed 756 carats; recut by Garrards, it was reduced to 106 - fit symbol of waning Indian fortunes.
Marian Fowler (Below the Peacock Fan: First Ladies of the Raj)
[Charles] Hatton had no way of knowing it then as he sat on the bench, but there was a young racehorse turning the corner of the racetrack--perhaps 150 yards away--who would fulfill some ideal that he had been turning over in his head since Billy Walker put it there more than fifty years ago. Secretariat walked down the pathway toward the paddock, toward the towering canopy of trees above the saddling area, toward Hatton, who saw the colt and came to his feet. The red horse filled Hatton's eyes of an instant, not striding into his field of vision but swimming into it, pulling Hatton from the bench to a standstill before him. Hatton had seen thousands of horses in his life, thousands of two-year-olds, and suddenly on this July afternoon of 1972 he found the 106-carat diamond: "It was like seeing a bunch of gravel and there was the Kohinoor lying in there. It was so unexpected. I thought, 'Jesus Christ, I never saw a horse that looked like that before.
William Nack (Secretariat: The Making of a Champion)