Yes. There was one letter from Karl Marx, written on behalf of the International Workingmen's Association, the Central Council, to Abraham Lincoln. It was dated shortly after Lincoln had been reelected as President of the US, in late November of 1864.
The basis and point of the letter was to congratulate Lincoln for ending slavery by sanctioning the Southern States who attempted to secede from the Union, attributing the abolition of Slavery, as a main motive.
There was a reply sent to Marx and the International Workingmen's Association, by Charles Adams, the then US Ambassador to Great Britain, on behalf of President Lincoln. The reason the reply was sent from the US Ambassador to the UK, was likely due to: 1.) at the time the letter was written to Lincoln, Marx was living in London and 2.) the International Workingmen's Association was also headquartered in London, England.
Both Marx's letter and the Ambassador's letter of reply, were re-printed in Full-content in the The Bee-Hive-Newspaper --- an English weekly published by the trade unions in London between 1861 and 1876.
(See copy of Marx's letter and the Ambassador's reply in the related link.)
There are numerous letters written by him and he expresses a lot of things.
Abraham Lincoln Brick has written: 'Addresses and speeches by Abraham Lincoln Brick'
Abraham Lincoln Lavine has written: 'Manual on commerical law'
No. Abraham Lincoln was born February 12, 1809, and the Declaration of Independence was written somewhere between June and July 1776.
V. Neil Wyrick has written: 'The spiritual Abraham Lincoln' -- subject(s): Biography, Presidents, Religion 'I Am' 'Letters To America'
Abraham Lincoln
Phillip S Paludan has written: 'The presidency of Abraham Lincoln' -- subject(s): Politics and government, Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865
Albert Shaw has written: 'Abraham Lincoln'
C. Sandburg has written: 'Abraham Lincoln'
Because he was a vampire slayer.
He did not, as the Bill of Rights was written and signed before Lincoln was born.
Martin Luther Houser has written: 'Abraham Lincoln, student' 'Lincoln's education and other essays'