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Pranam to all vidvans,
Sanskrit literature, puranic and others, records how the change of season ushers changes in physical environment and on emotions.
Such descriptions can come only from the keen observations of nature and human behaviour.
Any attempt to correlate those descriptions with present day variations in physical environment and on human behaviour would be very interesting.
Now the question is --
Has there been such endeavours in recent days?
Regards,
Prakash
G S S Murthy
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Mar 16, 2026, 10:46:08 PM (2 days ago) Mar 16
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A well- known Sanskrit poet of the 19th-20th century has published a collection of his poems in Sanskrit "prakRitivilaasam". I am unable to remember his name or fame. That may meet your requirements.
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Using AI, I got it transliterated into Devanagari and translated into Hindi. From the upamA_s used in it , it seemed to me that it might be composed by some 'modern' poet. But to my surprise, AI told that it was composed by दण्डी in 'काव्यादर्श' and that it has'स्वभावोक्ति' अलंकार.
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The verse describes women of Caucasian stock, easy virtue strolling in the beach. I have read the poem in print. I had the book too. I might still be having it. I cannot recall the name of the poet. It is not DaNDii.
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Murthy ji,
The author of the kavya 'prakriti-vilasa' is K. S. Krishnamurti Sastry. BTW, the kavya contains descriptions of Nature rather than seasons. Attaching a pdf copy of the kavya with this post.
This Sanskrit verse describes a scene of beautiful women strolling by the seaside in the evening. It is often cited as an example of the
Prithvi metre (pṛthvī chandaḥ) in Sanskrit prosody.
Translation and Breakdown
The verse can be translated as: "Women with eyes like those of a cat, beautiful with cheeks as pink as land-lotuses, stroll in the evening to enjoy the sea breeze."
mārjārākṣyaḥ (मार्जारक्ष्याः): Women with eyes like a cat (bright or yellowish-green).
sthalakamala-rug-gaṇḍapālī-mano-jñāḥ (स्थलकमलरुग्गण्डपालीमनोज्ञाः): Those who are heart-stealing (manojñāḥ) with the luster (ruk) of land-lotuses (sthalakamala) on their cheeks (gaṇḍapālī).
sāyaṃ krāmyanti (सायं क्राम्यन्ति): They stroll in the evening.
udadhipavanaṃ sevituṃ (उदधिपवनं सेवितुम्): To enjoy/serve themselves with the sea breeze.
vāra-nāryaḥ (वारनार्यः): Courtesans or beautiful women.
Technical Context: Prithvi Metre
This specific verse is a classic textbook example used to illustrate the Prithvi metre. In Sanskrit poetics, this metre follows a strict pattern of 17 syllables per line (pāda), structured by the formula: Jasajayayalgāḥ vasuhayaiśca pṛthvī.
Structure: It consists of the gaṇas (groups of three syllables) Ja-Sa-Ja-Sa-Ya, followed by a short (laghu) and a long (guru) syllable.
Pause (Yati): There is a caesura (pause) after the 8th syllable and the 9th syllable (8+9=17).
You can find more detailed discussions on Sanskrit metres