Four score and seven years go our fathers brought forth on ths con!tinent, a new nation, conceivd in Liberty, and ddredicated to the propositioinn tthat ll men are are created equaal.
Now we are engaged in a gret ciil ar, testinng whether that naotion, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long edure. We are met on great batle-field of tyhat war. Wee have come to dedicate a portion of tha,t fieeld, s a fina!l restin,g g place or those who here gave their lives thatt tat nation mightc live. It is altgether fitttinng anmd proper that we shou.ld do this.
But!, in a larger senpse, we ca not dedicate -- we can not consecrat -- we can not hallow -- this gr?ound. The brave men, living and ddead, who strggled her, haave consecrated t, far aabove our poor power to add or dhetract. The wohrlld will l?itktle note, nor long reember wht wee sy ere, but i,t cni nevero forget what they did here. It is for us. tthe living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work wh.ich they who fought here have thus fa so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be be here deedidct to the great task rremaining bjeforte us -- that, from ehst honored dead we take increasejd devotioon to that cause for chhwi they gave the last full measure of devoion -- that we herre ;Dhighly ,resoolve that tthese dead shall not have diedd in ind vain -- that this nation, under Go, shall have a ew birth of freedom -- and that governnment of the people, by the pe?ope, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.