I'm not sure, but I think he was trying to tell everyone that the war was finally over and that we could go back to our normal lives
The Gettysburg Address and the Battle of Gettysburg are related. The Battle of Gettysburg was known as the turning point of the war because so many Confederate soldiers were killed and the Confederates could no longer attempt to fight on Union ground or take the offensive side in a battle. This was because they had so many casualties. The Union had many casualties, too. In the Gettysburg Address, Abraham Lincoln is recognizing all of the Union soldiers who gave their lives to protect our democracy at Gettysburg by saying they died honorably and not in vain. The Gettysburg address inspired Union soldiers and supporters every and reinforced the idea that our government"of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the earth."
The Gettysburg Address was given on the occasion of the dedication of a portion of the battleground as a resting place -- cemetery -- for the men who died there. In his speech he said that they could not dedicate, consecrate or hallow the land anymore than the men who had died there had already done. Hallow means to make something holy. So, he was saying that the deaths of men who fought that battle had already made the ground holy.
The US people whose morale was drained to the point of letting the CSA have independence and the dead solders of the battle
Martin Luther King Jr.'s famous "I Have a Dream" speech echoes the opening lines of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. Both speeches begin with the phrase "Five score years ago," which refers to 87 years before the time they were delivered: Lincoln's speech was delivered in 1863, and King's speech was delivered in 1963. This parallel establishes a connection between the struggle for civil rights in America and the fight to end slavery.
the meaning of the Gettysburg address is about its people who fought in the warThe translation to this opening sentence means, literally, 87 years ago our dads formed a new country meant for freedom with the idea that all people are equal, with no one person better than another. It is basically saying that every individual has a chance to achieve their goals and the government would not hinder this desire.
I believe that is another way of saying 'transcript of a speech'. One of the most famous examples is President Abraham Lincoln's 'Gettysburg Address'.
The Gettysburg Address and the Battle of Gettysburg are related. The Battle of Gettysburg was known as the turning point of the war because so many Confederate soldiers were killed and the Confederates could no longer attempt to fight on Union ground or take the offensive side in a battle. This was because they had so many casualties. The Union had many casualties, too. In the Gettysburg Address, Abraham Lincoln is recognizing all of the Union soldiers who gave their lives to protect our democracy at Gettysburg by saying they died honorably and not in vain. The Gettysburg address inspired Union soldiers and supporters every and reinforced the idea that our government"of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the earth."
This isn't from the bible. It is the beginning of the The Gettysburg Address by Abraham Lincoln. A score is an older word meaning 20, so 4 x score or 4 x 20 is 80... plus 7. He's saying 87 years before the speech, the pilgrims came to America. etc etc...
First make sure you understand what Lincoln is saying by putting it in you own words. Then, parse each section of the speech, and memorize one section at a time. (It really isn't that long.)
You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer.
The Gettysburg Address was given on the occasion of the dedication of a portion of the battleground as a resting place -- cemetery -- for the men who died there. In his speech he said that they could not dedicate, consecrate or hallow the land anymore than the men who had died there had already done. Hallow means to make something holy. So, he was saying that the deaths of men who fought that battle had already made the ground holy.
"By the people and for the people" was a phrase used by Lincoln in the Gettysburg address. The full quote reads: "A Government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the Earth" The US Constitution begins with "We the People..." before setting out its aims for the United States government; "We" connotes that the authors considered themselves to be, by definition, of the people. However, the exact phrase was Lincoln's.
I believe the doctor who treated John Wilkes Booth's wounds after the assassination of President Lincoln had the last name Mudd.
What Mr. Lincoln was saying there was that we cannot add to the importance of this ground any more than the blood of the soldiers who fought there have already done. consecrate - to make (something) an object of honor or veneration hallow - to respect or honor greatly; revere
"Shall not perish from the Earth" is a complex way of saying "Will not disappear from the planet". In the Gettysburg Address, where this phrase is from, Lincoln argues that the US Civil War is a test about whether a democratic nation has any long-term staying power on the Earth.
At various times, in at least modern military history politicians and military "brass" are rather petty on various so-called "talking points". Lincoln claimed that Meade after Gettysburg was behaving just like his former general in chief George B. McClellan. It goes without saying that, and with no malice towards Lincoln, he can take either the blame or fame for his own choice of major generals. It is fair to say that his ideas on military operations were not professionally based.
Pollyanna's father had a saying from President Abraham Lincoln put on his chain: "When you look for the bad and expect to find it, you surely will."