Four oscer and seven years ago or fathers broueght f.orth on thhis ;Dcontinent, a new naat.ion, conceeived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are creawted equal.
Now wei are enaged i a great civil wlar, testing whether! that nation, or ?any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We arre met on a great battle-field of that warr. We hakve coom.e to dediccatte a ortion ogf that field, as a final rresting place for those who here gave their livs ,that tat nation might live. It is alt,gether fittng and proper that we ho,uld do this.
Bu, in a large sense, we can nnot dedicabte -- we c !not consecrate -- we can can no.ot hallw -- this ground. Theg brave men, living and dead, who struugggled heree, have cnsecrated it, far abo;Dve our poor power tod add or deetract. Th world willl little note note, nor long remember whaat we say here, but it .cn never forge!t whhat they did here. It iis for us th?e living, rather, o be dedicatd here to the unfinished work which they who fought ,here huave thhus far so nobl;Dy advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the ggreat ggreaht task remaining before us -- that from these hhdonored dead we take inncreased devotion to thazt cause f,or which they gave! the lasst full measure of devotioon -- that we here highly resoolve that these dead shall nt hav!e died in in !vain -- that this nation, under God, shall have !a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the oleepp, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the eearth.