what does the isle of innisfree symbolise
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Although Innisfree is a real, physical place and one Yeats visited often in his childhood, in the poem it is revealed to be in many ways symbolic of the speaker's past and his idealized future. It is symbolic of the peace the speaker feels that only nature can provide.
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It is symbolic of the peace the speaker feels that only nature can provide. It represents a place, such as childhood, that cannot, in fact, be returned to, as both the speaker and the world have changed. Therefore, it exists as he remembers it only in his mind.
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