C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
Critical and Biographical Introduction by Bayard Quincy Morgan (18831967)
By Hugo von Hofmannsthal (18741929)
B
The bulk of Hofmannsthal’s work is in the field of drama, where he evinces a considerable versatility. Two tendencies, however, can be traced through all his dramatic works. His fellow-craftsmen had once declared: “We purpose not the invention of stories, but the reproduction of moods, not contemplation but delineation, and we desire not to entertain but to leave an impression.” This is essentially the function of the lyric poet, and Hofmannsthal’s plays abound in passages which are essentially lyric in spirit if not in form, and which alone give these works their permanence. Such a classic as ‘Death and the Fool,’ for example, which still perhaps represents the high-water mark of his achievement, is but little more than a series of lyric moods of great beauty and charm.
The other tendency may be gathered from Hofmannsthal’s remark that, “no direct road leads from poetry into life, none from life into poetry.” So we find him, like the Romanticists with whom his spirit most closely allies him, choosing his themes by preference in a far-away age or clime. Now it is classic Greece that attracts him, as in ‘Œdipus and the Sphinx’—a superb study of a man born to rule—and ‘Electra’—a particularly vivid, yet gruesome and overdrawn, psychological picture. Again, it is Italy of the sensuous beauty that he uses for background, in an adaptation of Otway’s ‘Venice Preserved,’—where he attempts a psychological interpretation of the hero-traitor, Jaffier,—in ‘Christina’s Homeward Journey,’ a comedy, and in ‘The Adventurer and the Singer.’ For ‘The Marriage of Sobeide’ he chooses ancient Persia for his romantic setting, while his ‘Rose Cavalier’—a brilliant comedy, chiefly known through Richard Strauss’s use of it as a libretto—gains color from the courtly costumes of an earlier day.
Dramatically, Hofmannsthal’s greatest successes so far are perhaps ‘The Marriage of Sobeide’ and ‘The Adventurer and the Singer.’ The former just falls short of greatness by a straining both of probability and poetic truth in the second act, yet has lines of imperishable beauty, and the third act is quite perfect in its kind. The other verse-drama, founded on an episode in the life of Casanova, succeeds to an extraordinary degree in re-creating the atmosphere of luxury-loving Venice; and the chief figures are poignantly true.
Hofmannsthal matured very early, and in some respects he has not fulfilled the high promise of his first published work, a dramatic sketch written at the age of seventeen. Yet there is surely no other dramatist in Germany to-day whose work holds out such hope for the future as that of Hugo von Hofmannsthal.