The Lake Isle of Innisfree | Themes
Nature
“The Lake Isle of Innisfree” expresses the idea that nature provides an inherently restorative place to which human beings can go to escape the chaos and corrupting influences of civilization. In his autobiography, Yeats writes that his poem was influenced by his reading of American writer Henry David Thoreau’s Walden (1854), which describes Thoreau’s experiment of living alone in a small hut in the woods on Walden Pond, outside Concord, Massachusetts. Thoreau lived in his one-room house from 1845–1847, gardening, writing, and studying natural...
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- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Introduction
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Text of the Poem
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Summary
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: William Butler Yeats Biography
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Themes
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Style
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Historical Context
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Critical Overview
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Essays and Criticism
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Compare and Contrast
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Topics for Further Study
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Media Adaptations
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: What Do I Read Next?
- The Lake Isle of Innisfree: Bibliography and Further Reading
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