Innisfree is depicted as a beautiful, natural, and peaceful place in the poem "The Lake Isle of Innisfree" by W.B. Yeats. It is an actual small island where the poet desires to build a small cabin of clay and wattles, plant nine rows of beans, and keep a hive for honeybees. The place symbolizes tranquility and solitude, where nature is in full swing, with the sounds of bees, crickets, and lake water. The poet contrasts this natural peace with the harshness and grey pavements of city life, finding in Innisfree a refuge and mental escape from the modern world's chaos. It is both a physical place and a state of mind reflecting peace and harmony with nature, deeply missed by the poet when away from it.