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Lot #207
Ludwig Wittgenstein Autograph Letter Signed

Wittgenstein recalls good times in Vienna, explaining that he has "no other disease than plain laziness"

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Description

Wittgenstein recalls good times in Vienna, explaining that he has "no other disease than plain laziness"

Highly influential Austrian-British philosopher (1889–1951) whose greatest contributions were in the fields of logic, philosophy of mathematics, and language. ALS in German, signed “Ludwig Wittgenstein,” one page, 5 x 8, May 23, 1950. Handwritten letter to to Barbara Gaun, housekeeper to the Wittgenstein family from 1912 to 1951, in full (translated): “I only want to tell you that I am often thinking of the wonderful time we had in Vienna, particularly of the great kindness you extended towards my sisters Mining and Wicki. Personally I am doing well and I can assure you that I suffer of no other disease than plain laziness. Hoping you in Vienna are enjoying the same beautiful days as we are having right now. Summer is almost with us. Please extend our most cordial regards to everyone.” In very fine condition.

In 1950, three years after resigning his professorship at Cambridge to concentrate on his writing, Wittgenstein was diagnosed with incurable prostate cancer-a fact that he seemingly kept to himself when he returned to his family home to visit his dying sister Hermine at the start of the year. “I can assure you that I suffer of no other disease than plain laziness,” he writes to the family’s longtime housekeeper, thanking her for her kind treatment of his sisters and shrugging off his own troubles. Following Hermine’s death in February, he stayed with various friends—G.H. von Wright in Cambridge during April, then Rush Rhees in London, and finally Elizabeth Anscombe in Oxford, where he wrote this letter. He then returned to Cambridge, where he began work on his final manuscripts—posthumously published as Remarks on Colour and On Certainty—before passing away at the end of April in 1951. A charmingly cheerful letter from the influential philosopher, exuding the positivity that he found in his final days, which ended with the touching remarks, ‘Tell them I’ve had a wonderful life.’


From the personal collection of a lifelong collector, teacher, and traveler with a passion for world history. His collecting years ranged from the 1970s to the present day, meaning that several of the premier pieces have not been on the market in decades.

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