Erwin Kobel is an example of a critic who uses biographical evidence from Hofmannsthal's life to show the autobiographical links between his life and the Lord Chandos Letter. Thomas Kovach argues that "so many critics viewed
The Lord Chandos Letter as an autobiographical document" because of Hofmannsthal's personal literary crisis that stemmed from his own self-doubt. However, he continues to argue that while there are apparent autobiographical elements of the work, most critics agree that
The Lord Chandos Letter is in fact a work of fiction. He supports this claim by revealing the anomaly that Hofmannsthal is able to eloquently write about a crisis of language. That this work is fiction is reinforced by the fact that Hofmannsthal had a literary career past the publishing of
The Lord Chandos Letter, whereas Lord Chandos promises never to compose again. Kovach presents another possible interpretation of the work. He writes that the crisis of language should be viewed as deeper than simply a predicament of communication and the limits of language. Since language is used to express thought, he concludes that the crisis examined by Hofmannsthal should be seen as one of cognition in addition to one of language; he asserts that Chandos is unable to write clearly because he is unable to think clearly. Another opinion on
The Lord Chandos Letter is that it is evidence of an
existential crisis. This existential crisis is related to the reconstruction of
fin-de-siècle Vienna and the ensuing crisis felt by society. With the transition to an industrial society, forms and manners of expression previously deemed effective were no longer capable of articulating the thoughts and ideas of Viennese society. Michael Morton, another critic, views the crisis reflected in
The Lord Chandos Letter as a set of predicaments. He feels Hofmannsthal expresses dilemmas of the self and of language. He argues that Chandos' crisis is a conflict between viewing the self as a subject or as an object. The second conflict he sees in the work is a conflict regarding the functionality and usefulness of language. In terms of the utility of language, Morton presents the tension between ideas being built around language rather than vice versa, language attempting to have more power than it is meant to have, and language trying to explain ideas and truths above its capabilities. Jacques Le Rider analyzes Hofmannsthal's choice of Francis Bacon as the recipient of the letter. Le Rider recognizes elements of Ernst Mach's works within
The Lord Chandos Letter; Francis Bacon can be identified as the individual who laid the foundation for the work of Ernst Mach. Ernst Mach's works discusses the elimination of barriers between "inside and outside, the self and the world". ==References==