She started her career as a teacher and went on to become the principal of
Prayag Mahila Vidyapeeth. Although she was married in her childhood, Varma chose to live independently and did not live with her husband, a decision that influenced both her personal life and her literary career. She was also a painter and translator. She went on to receive several of the highest literary awards in Hindi literature.
Literary Nihar was her debut collection of poems. She composed
Nihar in 1930,
Rashmi in 1932, and
Neerja in 1933. In 1936, a collection of her poems titled
Sandhya Geet was published. In 1939, four poetry collections were published with their respective artworks under the title
Yāmā. Apart from these, she also wrote memoirs and essays, with
Mera Parivar (My Family),
Smriti ki Rekhaye (Sketches from memory),
Path ke Sathi (Path's Companions),
Shrinkhala ki Kariyan (Series of Links), and
Ateet ke Chalchitra (Scenes from Past) being prominent among them.
Women's advocacy from then British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher in 1982 Varma is also considered among the pioneers of
feminism in India.Throughout her career, Varma's work in writing, editing, and teaching significantly advanced the development of Prayag Mahila Vidyapeeth in
Allahabad. In 1923, she took over
Chand, the leading women's magazine. In 1955, Varma established the Literary Parliament in Allahabad with the help of Ilachandra Joshi and eventually took up the editorship of its publication. This laid the foundation for women poets' conferences in India. Mahadevi was greatly influenced by Buddhism. Under the influence of
Mahatma Gandhi, she took up public service and worked in Jhansi in support of the Indian struggle for freedom. In 1937, Mahadevi Varma built a house in the village of
Umagarh,
Ramgarh, Uttarakhand, 25 km from
Nainital. She named it Meera Temple. She started working for the people of the village and their education. She dedicated herself to women's education and their economic self-sufficiency. Today, this bungalow is known as the Mahadevi Sahitya Museum. She advocated for women's education and economic self-sufficiency. Her strong condemnation of social stereotypes earned her recognition as a women's rights advocate. She had also been called a social reformer due to her development work and public service towards women and their education. Literary scholars have noted that her work emphasizes creative resolve and social transformation rather than personal anguish. In her essay
Stree Ka Patnitva (“The Wifehood of Hindu Women”), Varma compared traditional marriage structures to forms of social subjugation. She writes that, without affiliation to any political or financial authority, women are relegated to roles as wives and mothers. Her feminism is often overshadowed by her poetic persona. Through poems like
Cha, she explores themes and ideas of female sexuality. In her short story,
Biblia, she addresses the subject of women's physical and mental abuse. She spent most of her life in Allahabad (now Prayagraj), Uttar Pradesh, where she died on 11 September 1987. == Works ==