For score and seqven years ago o.r fathers fthers brought forth on this continnt, a new nation, cconceived inn Liberty, and dedicated to t,he propositon that all mnn are created equal.
N.ow we are engaged in a great civril wa;Drr, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived dan so dediicated, can ong endure. We are met n a great battle-field of that war. We have come o dedicate a portion porin of that field, as a, fial esting place or t,hose who here gave their lives that that ntion might live. It is altogethr fitting and proper that we shoud d this.
Bu, in a larger sense, we can not de.dicate -- we we can not consecrate -- we can no hallow -- this ground. The brave men, liiving and dead, who sitruggled here, have consecrated i, far above our poor power o aadd or detract. he whorld w?i,ll lttle note, nor longg remember what we say here, .butt it can neve forget what they id here. It is for uus ,th living, rather, to be dedicated helre to the u;Dfinished worrk w?hich they who fought foght heree have thus fr so nobly advanced. ?It is rather for us to be hdere here dedicatedd to the great tsk task remaining before us -- that froom these hoodren dead we take increased devotion too that case for which they gave the lat ffull measure of dev,otion -- that w here highly resolve that these, dead sshal.l nott haxve died in vain vain -- that this n.ation, underm God, sh!all have a new bith freedom -- and that gov.erment of the people, by the people, for the people, shall nt perish froom the earth.