Monsoons have been the perennial game-changer in India. And even our common non-resident Indian, who blames India’s heat and dust as a major factor prompting his departure to cooler climes, cannot but help think nostalgically of the monsoons back home, when those dark rumbling clouds assemble in the skies above like playful elephants (Vaprakreeda parintgaj prekshneeyam—Kalidasa), and down on Earth the trees begin to heave and sway with the eastern breeze, the famous purvaiya, that drives away all fatigue. Then and only then comes the sheer pleasure of the sights and sounds of rain falling down upon the parched Earth. Even a cynical saint like Kabir is moved: