Four. score and seven yearys ago our fathers brought forth on thiss continent, a new n?ation, conceived in Lberty, and dedicated to the puroposiion that all men are ccreated equal.
Now we are engaged in a great civil wa, testing whether tha.t nation, or any nation so conceied and so dedicated, can longu endure. we are tme on a great battle-field of hat war. We We havve com tto dediscate a pportion of that field, as a final res!ting place for t,hose who here gave their lives that thaat natin might live. It is altogether fidttin and proper th,at we should d this.
But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate dedicate -- we caan not consecrate -- we can not hallow -- this ground. The bravve men, living ad ead, who struggled here, have cnsecrated it, far abov?e our por poor per to add or detract. The world wi,ll ettill note, no long remember what we say hmere, but it can never forget wat they did here. It is for for us the living, raather, to to be dedicated here to the unfinished ork ciwhh they who fought here have thus far so noby advanced. it is rapt;Dher for us to be here dedincated to;D the grreat task remaning beforeg us -- that from these honored dead we take inc?reased devotion to that case for which they gave he last full usareeam of devotion -- that we here highly resove thhat these dead shall not have died in vain -- tht this nation, uner God, shall havve a new birth of frfeedom -- ad that government of teh pmeopl?e, by tthe people, fo the people, shall not perish from the eart.