The Hindi literary world has a fascinating tradition of describing the six Indian seasons not merely as changes in weather, but as moods of the soul. Among the poets who painted the monsoon — Varsha Ritu — with astonishing beauty are Padmakar and Ratnakar.
their poetry, the rainy season becomes more than clouds and thunder — it becomes a spiritual experience.
Varsha Ritu — The Season that Awakens Memory
In Indian thought, the rains are never merely meteorological.
Summer exhausts the earth. Dust settles on leaves, rivers shrink, birds grow silent. Then suddenly the sky darkens. Wind changes direction. The fragrance of wet earth rises like forgotten devotion returning to the heart.
This is why poets saw Varsha Ritu as:
reunion after separation,
grace after suffering,
and divine compassion after spiritual drought.
The peacock dances not because it has reasoned about rain, but because it feels its arrival.
Bhakti poets often said the soul should respond to God exactly like that peacock.
Padmakar’s Monsoon — Ornamented Splendour
Padmakar belonged to the ornate Riti tradition of Hindi poetry. His descriptions are lush, jeweled, musical. In his hands, clouds become royal processions.
He describes:
lightning as golden ornaments,
clouds as elephant armies,
thunder as celestial drums,
and rain as pearls descending from heaven.
Nature itself appears dressed for celebration.
Padmakar’s poetry often creates movement:
rivers swelling,
creepers trembling,
women waiting near balconies,
lovers looking toward distant roads.
The emotional undercurrent is viraha — longing.
The rains intensify remembrance. Every drop becomes a messenger.
One can almost hear a pause over such verses, savoring each image, to feel not only the poetry but the rasa hidden inside it.
Ratnakar’s Monsoon — The Inner Rain
Ratnakar approaches the rains differently.
Where Padmakar dazzles the eye, Ratnakar often touches the heart more directly.
In his verses:
clouds become symbols of divine mercy,
rain becomes grace,
and the parched earth becomes the yearning devotee.
The chataka bird waiting for a single pure raindrop from the sky is a favorite Indian metaphor. Ratnakar uses such imagery beautifully: the true seeker does not drink from every pond of worldly pleasure; he waits only for the rain of the Divine Name.
Here the monsoon becomes spiritual philosophy.
Why Monsoon Poetry Touches India So Deeply
India experiences rain dramatically.
Before the monsoon:
heat burns,
lakes dry,
cattle suffer,
and fields crack.
Then suddenly life returns.
So poets naturally saw in rain:
Krishna returning to Vrindavan,
Rama returning to Ayodhya,
the Guru returning to the disciple,
or forgotten devotion returning to the heart.
This is why so many bhajans, ragas, and poems are linked to the rainy season:
Megh Malhar,
Miyan ki Malhar,
the songs of Meerabai,
the monsoon verses of Kalidasa in Meghaduta,
and later Hindi poets like Padmakar and Ratnakar.
When spiritual speakers quote classical poetry, they are doing more than literary appreciation. They are reconnecting modern listeners to an older Indian sensitivity — a world where:
seasons carried emotion,
clouds carried philosophy,
and rain carried remembrance of God.
such poetry not as scholarship alone, but as a doorway into bhava — devotional feeling.
One may first admire the imagery.
the drought within,
the waiting within,
and the rain one secretly longs for.
Ultimately, Varsha Ritu in Indian poetry symbolizes one eternal truth:
The soul cannot remain dry forever.
Sooner or later, the clouds gather, the fragrance rises, the heart softens, and grace begins to fall.
Just as the earth turns green after rain, the human heart too becomes fertile after remembrance of the Divine.
The coming of Varsha Ritu — the rainy season — has inspired poets across Sanskrit, Braj, Awadhi, and Hindi literature. Among the great masters who painted the monsoon with brilliance are Padmakar and Jagannathdas Ratnakar.
Their poetry does not merely describe rain. It makes the clouds move before our eyes, lets peacocks cry in distant groves, and awakens longing, devotion, romance, and remembrance.
Padmakar on Varsha Ritu
Padmakar was renowned for lush imagery, musical language, and emotional richness. His descriptions of the monsoon are filled with movement and colour.
Verse 1
घन घमंड नभ गरजत घोरा।
प्रियहीन डरपत मन मोरा॥
The proud clouds thunder fiercely across the sky.
Separated from the beloved, my heart trembles in fear.
Though simple, the verse captures a classic Indian poetic mood — viraha (longing in separation). The rain that delights the world becomes unbearable for one who waits for a loved one.
Verse 2
दादुर बोलत बन बन माहीं।
नाचत मोर, पपीहा गाहीं॥
Frogs croak through the forests,
Peacocks dance, and the papiha birds sing.
The whole world seems awakened. Nature itself becomes musical during Varsha Ritu. One can almost hear the sounds rising from wet earth and dark groves.
Verse 3
चमकति चपला चहुँ दिसि छाई।
जलद घटा घनघोर सुहाई॥
Lightning flashes in every direction,
And dense rain-clouds spread their beautiful darkness.
Padmakar loved contrasts — darkness and brilliance, thunder and fragrance, longing and joy. The monsoon sky becomes both frightening and enchanting.
Ratnakar on Varsha Ritu
Jagannathdas Ratnakar often wrote with delicacy and emotional depth. His monsoon verses carry refinement and inner feeling.
Verse 1
बरसन लागे बदरिया सावन की।
भीजत डारन, भीजत पात॥
The monsoon clouds of Shravan begin to pour.
Branches are drenched, leaves are drenched.
The beauty here lies in simplicity. Rain does not discriminate. Everything receives it equally — trees, leaves, pathways, hearts.
Verse 2
उमड़ि घुमड़ि घन आए गगन में।
जागी प्रीति पुरानी मन में॥
Clouds gather and swirl across the sky,
And old love awakens once more in the heart.
This is quintessential Indian aesthetics. Rain revives memory. Forgotten emotions bloom again like parched earth receiving water.
Verse 3
कोयल मौन भई अब वन में।
बोलत दादुर ताल तटन् में॥
The cuckoo has now fallen silent in the forests,
While frogs call loudly beside the ponds.
A subtle seasonal transition is shown here. Spring belongs to the cuckoo; the rainy season belongs to frogs, thunder, and peacocks.
The Deeper Symbolism of Varsha Ritu
Indian poets rarely described seasons merely for decoration. The rainy season symbolized:
reunion after separation,
divine grace descending upon earth,
awakening of dormant emotions,
fertility and abundance,
and sometimes the soul yearning for God.
In Bhakti poetry especially, dark rain clouds often remind devotees of Krishna himself — Shyama, the dark-hued Lord.
The peacock dancing before thunder becomes the devotee dancing before divine presence.
The thirsty chataka bird waiting for a drop from the heavens becomes the soul waiting for grace.
And the earth, cracked by summer heat, becomes the human heart waiting for compassion.
One notices that both Padmakar and Ratnakar do not merely “describe weather.” They transform rain into emotion. In their poetry, clouds are messengers, lightning is memory, thunder is longing, and wet earth becomes poetry itself.
















