To Mrs. L. H. Phipps1Jump to section
Mrs. L. H. Phipps Washington, March 9, 1863.
Yours of the 8th. is received. It is difficult for you to understand, what is, nevertheless true, that the bare reading of a letter of that length requires more than any one person's share of my time. And when read, what is it but an evidence that you intend to importune me for one thing, and another, and another, until, in self-defence, I must drop all and devote myself to find a place, even though I remove somebody else to do it, and thereby turn him & his friends upon me for indefinite future importunity, and hindrance from the legitimate duties for which I am supposed to be placed here.? Yours &c. A. LINCOLN
Annotation
[1] ADfS, DLC-RTL. Lincoln probably did not send this letter. See his letter to Stanton, infra. The letter from Mrs. L. (S.?) H. Phipps of March 8, 1863, reads in part: ``Mr Stanton declined making another appointment to a Pennsylvanian . . . but I have been told that had I applied for Mr Phipps as from Memphis . . . Mr Stanton w'd probably have nominated him---& that it is not