In 1900 Hofmannsthal met the
composer Richard Strauss for the first time. He later wrote
libretti for several of his
operas, including
Elektra (1909),
Der Rosenkavalier (1911), the plot of which he developed together with
Harry Graf Kessler,
Ariadne auf Naxos (1912, rev. 1916),
Die Frau ohne Schatten (1919),
Die ägyptische Helena (1928), and
Arabella (1929, but first performed in 1933). In 1911 he adapted the 15th century English
morality play Everyman as
Jedermann, and Einar Nilson wrote the music for it. The play later became a staple at the
Salzburg Festival. During World War I Hofmannsthal held a government post. Nevertheless, the years after the war were very productive ones for Hofmannsthal; he continued with his earlier literary projects, almost without a break. He wrote several new libretti for Richard Strauss operas. In 1920, Hofmannsthal, along with
Max Reinhardt, founded the Salzburg Festival. His later plays revealed a growing interest in
religious, particularly
Roman Catholic, themes. Among his writings was a screenplay for
a film version of
Der Rosenkavalier (1925) directed by
Robert Wiene.
Thought On 18 October 1902 Hofmannsthal published a fictive letter in the Berlin daily
Der Tag (
The Day), titled simply
"Ein Brief" ("A Letter"). It was purportedly written in 1603 by Philip, Lord Chandos, to
Francis Bacon. In this letter Chandos says that he has stopped writing because he has "lost completely the ability to think or to speak of anything coherently"; he has given up on the possibility of language to describe the world. This letter reflects the growing distrust of and dissatisfaction with language that so characterizes the Modern era, and Chandos's dissolving personality is not only individual but societal. Growing up the son of a wealthy merchant who was well connected with the major artists of the time, Hofmannsthal was raised in what
Carl Schorske refers to as "the temple of art". This perfect setting for aesthetic isolation allowed Hofmannsthal the unique perspective of the privileged artist, but also allowed him to see that art had become a flattened documenting of humanity, which took our instincts and desires and framed them for viewing without acquiring any of the living, passionate elements. Because of this realization, Hofmannsthal's idea of the role of the artist began to take shape as someone who created works that would inspire or inflame the instinct, rather than merely preserving it in a creative form. He also began to think that the artist should not be someone isolated and left to his art, but rather a man of the world, immersed in both politics and art. Hofmannsthal saw in English culture the ideal setting for the artist. This was because the English simultaneously admired
Admiral Nelson, a war hero, and
John Milton, a poet, while still maintaining a solid national identity. "In [Hofmannsthal's] view, the division between artist (writer) and man of action (politician, explorer, soldier) does not exist in England. Britain provides her subjects with a common base of energy which functions as equilibrium, a force lacking in fragmented Germany" (Weiss). This singular and yet pragmatic identity must have appealed to Hofmannsthal to a certain degree due to the large scale fragmentation of Austria at the time, which was witnessing the birth of radical nationalism and anti-Semitism, a nation in which the progressive artist and the progressive politician were growing more different and hostile to each other by the day.
Influence The Austrian author
Stefan Zweig wrote in his memoirs
The World of Yesterday (1942) on Hofmannsthal's early accomplishments and their influence on Zweig's generation: ==Personal life==