In the landscape of modern Marathi poetry, Suresh Bhat (1932–2003) occupies a unique and fiery niche. Known as the Ghazal Samrat (Emperor of Ghazals) of Maharashtra, his poetry is a raw, passionate outcry against social injustice, political hypocrisy, and communal violence. The term “Elgar” (meaning ‘rise up’ or ‘awaken’ in Urdu, famously echoing the rallying cry of the 1857 Indian Rebellion) finds a profound echo in Bhat’s work. A hypothetical or compiled would be a digital anthology of his most militant, consciousness-raising poems.