Grammatically, they are both correct, but only the first one has a meaning.
The first sentence suggests that the weather is cold, grey and gloomy, and so it is making me feel unhappy.
The second sentence doesn't mean anything.
If you are talking about actual weather systems, rather than the way that the weather makes you feel, you could use the word 'depression'. For example, a weather forecaster on TV might say 'There is a depression over the south of the country' or more commonly 'There is low pressure ..'.