He opened a different section of the Brhat Samhita : Chapter 3, On Meteors and Planetary Conjunctions . His calculations showed that Jupiter had entered the constellation of Rohini in the previous month, and Saturn was moving into the sign of the water-jar (Kumbha). According to the 300 shlokas he had personally verified from the sage Parāśara, this combination promised a delayed but violent monsoon—if a certain northern wind arose.
One sweltering summer, a great drought gripped Malwa. The rivers shrank to silver threads; the soil cracked like old pottery. King Vikramaditya, a patron of knowledge and war, summoned Varāhamihira to the throne room. the brhat samhita of varaha mihira varahamihira
“What order?” the King asked, skeptical. He opened a different section of the Brhat
“The wise man who knows the marriage of wind and water, He sees the future not in a crystal, but in a drop of rain.” One sweltering summer, a great drought gripped Malwa
That night, Varāhamihira climbed the stone steps of the Ujjain observatory. He watched the cirrus clouds, which the Brhat Samhita called ‘tāra-patha’ —the path of stars. They were moving east to west, but high, thin. Then, just before dawn, he felt it: a cold gust from the north-west.
Varāhamihira opened the manuscript to its final chapter, a quiet dedication. He read aloud:
Varāhamihira had spent thirty years traveling from the Himalayas to the Vindhyas, documenting the world. He knew that the Brhat Samhita was not a book of magic. It was a web of connections. The chapter on architecture ( Vastu ) dictated how a house facing a crossroads would suffer bad health—not from demons, but from dust and noise. The chapter on gemstones ( Ratnapariksha ) judged a diamond not by its curse but by its refraction, clarity, and flaw lines.