Much of Suroor's work is published in the collections,
Khumkhana-e-Suroor and
Jam-i-Suroor published in 1911 Another collection
Khumkada-e-Suroor was posthumously published in 1930. He wrote patriotic as well as religious poems. His major patriotic poems are
Khak-e-Watan (The Dust of the Motherland),
Urus-e-Hubie-Watan (The Love of the Bride of the Country),
Hasrat-e-Watan (The Longing of the country),
Yaad-e-Watan (Memory of the Country),
Madar-e-Hind (Mother India),
Gul-e-Bulbul ka fasana (The story of rose and nightingale) and
Sham-o-Parwana (The Moth and the Candle). His poem
Badnasib Bengal was written during the
partition of Bengal proposed by
Lord Curzon. His notable historical poems are
Padmani,
Padmani ki Chitah (The Funeral pyre of Padmani), Sitaji-ki-Giria-o-Zari (the Lament of Sita),
Dasrat ki bekarari (The Tribulations of Maharaja Dasrat),
Jamuna-Ganga,
Sati, and
Nur Jahan ka mazar (Tomb of Nur Jahan). Suroor's poetry is repleated with the employment of Hindi words and words of indigenous origins. His poetry is also filled with imagery from the old Hindu mythology. Much of his poetry is written in six-line stanzas or
mussuddus, however he used many other forms like
masnavi,
rubai, qita,
qasida and
ghazal. ==References==