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Hanuman Chalisa Lyrics in Hindi

Hanuman Chalisa
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About this composition: read the full lyrics, browse the song meaning, and move between artist, genre, and language pages without losing the reading flow.

Full Lyrics

This page keeps the opening verified verses from the source page in a clean, readable layout.

श्रीगुरु चरन सरोज रज निज मनु मुकुरु सुधारि । बरनऊँ रघुबर बिमल जसु जो दायकु फल चारि ॥

बुद्धिहीन तनु जानिके सुमिरौं पवनकुमार । बल बुद्धि बिद्या देहु मोहिं हरहु कलेस बिकार ॥

जय हनुमान ज्ञान गुन सागर । जय कपीस तिहुँ लोक उजागर ॥

राम दूत अतुलित बल धामा । अंजनिपुत्र पवनसुत नामा ॥

महाबीर बिक्रम बजरंगी । कुमति निवार सुमति के संगी ॥

Meaning & Significance

Hanuman Chalisa is one of the best-known devotional texts in North Indian practice because it compresses a complete spiritual mood into a compact, repeatable form. The opening doha begins with humility, not self-assertion. The speaker asks for clarity, strength, and freedom from inner confusion before moving into praise. That matters because the hymn is not only about Hanuman as a deity; it is also about preparing the mind to receive devotion well.

This is why the text keeps returning in daily life. People read it before work, before travel, before exams, and during moments of stress because it is easy to remember and easy to fit into a routine. It carries a steady tone that feels protective without being theatrical. Readers often search for the Chalisa when they want a reliable prayer they already trust, not a new interpretation.

The opening praise of Hanuman as a sea of knowledge and virtue also explains its emotional appeal. The hymn frames strength as disciplined service rather than raw force. That balance is a major reason the text stays relevant across generations. It gives devotees a way to ask for courage while keeping the mood reverent and focused.

For a lyrics page, that makes the reading experience especially important. If the text is hard to scan, the devotional function gets weaker. This page keeps the verses simple and readable so someone can open it quickly, chant a few lines, and return later without losing their place. The goal is not to outtalk the prayer, but to support it.

Another reason Hanuman Chalisa stays popular is that it works in both personal and group settings. A family can recite it together, a temple can sing it aloud, and an individual can read it quietly on a phone. That flexibility is part of its strength. The same words work in a crowded room or a private moment.

The source page also includes a separate aarti after the chalisa, but this page intentionally keeps the focus on the Chalisa proper. That makes the page cleaner for users who are searching for the prayer itself rather than the full ritual bundle.

Pronunciation Notes

The opening couplets should be read with a measured pace. The rhythm matters because the prayer is built to settle the mind before it moves into praise. If the lines are rushed, the devotional shape becomes flatter and less useful.

Readers who are using the page on mobile usually benefit from short line breaks and a calm reading flow. It is easier to chant one couplet at a time than to try to absorb the whole text at once. That simple pacing helps preserve the devotional mood.

About Tulsidas

Goswami Tulsidas remains central to Hindi devotional literature because he wrote in a way that ordinary readers could actually use. His verses are direct, memorable, and emotionally grounded. That is one reason his work continues to travel so well through homes, temples, and search results.

Tulsidas is often remembered for Rama-centered devotion, but his broader importance is that he gave bhakti a clear language. Readers do not have to decode a difficult literary frame before they can pray. They can begin immediately, which is exactly why the Hanuman Chalisa still works so well in modern mobile search.

On this page, the attribution to Tulsidas matters because it anchors the hymn in a devotional tradition readers already recognize. People searching this text often want both the lyrics and a trustworthy sense of who composed them. The page gives that context without drifting away from the prayer itself.

It is also worth noting that Tulsidas’s style is built for recitation, not just reading. That is why the verses feel so naturally chantable even when presented on a screen. The language is devotional first and literary second, which is exactly the right balance for a lyrics site.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many verses are in Hanuman Chalisa?

The Chalisa is traditionally understood as a 40-verse prayer, framed by opening and closing couplets. This page shows the opening verified section from the source.

Why do people search for Hanuman Chalisa in Hindi?

Many readers want the prayer in the original script so they can chant it more comfortably and follow the devotional rhythm without transliteration friction.

Can Hanuman Chalisa be read every day?

Yes. It is one of the most common daily devotional readings because it is compact, familiar, and easy to return to whenever someone wants a steady spiritual reset.