Many poets have offered their criticism of Blake and his works.
T. S. Eliot, a Nobel Prize–winning poet, had this to say about Blake and his
Songs of Innocence: "The Songs of Innocence and of Experience, and the poems from the Rossetti manuscript, are the poems of a man with a profound interest in human emotions, and a profound knowledge of them. The emotions are presented in an extremely simplified, abstract form. This form is one illustration of the eternal struggle of art against education, of the literary artist against the continuous deterioration of language." The poet Krystyna Kapitulka criticises "Night": "We have here, as it were, a reconciliation of day and night..." She also says that the images portrayed in the poem seems to "match nicely the atmosphere of a child's dream." ==References==