Hmm Virgil, it's an interesting poem, especially with the constant personification of the Seacoasts. What I think Montale is playing at is a sort of mature distortion of youth. The seacoasts I would assume symbolize to some extent the Genoese shores of his youth, and his past happiness before the war. But the problem is, he is returning after too much time, and the vision is distorted, and he cannot return. This was somewhat a popular preoccupation during Romanticism, but it is a little different in tone because of the layering of metaphor Montale approaches the Seacoast in.
The seacoasts seem to be the ones who have deserted Montale, and it is they which need to come back to him. That puzzles the reading, at makes the seacoast out to be somewhat of a different metaphor. To what though? The seas haven't changed of course, so what is meant by the changing, and rebirth a new. The sea is constant, as we are told in other works of his, and in other works of poetry.
I think it is too easy to read this poem as similar to Wordsworth, or even Leopardi, but I think it means something more. The sea, we must remember, is something more than that to Leopardi. Perhaps he is implying that he feels to attached, and constrained to the land now to actually break away, and be enveloped again by the sea?



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