The Gettysburg Address has delineated and derived meaning since the sixteenth president uttered the eminent 272 words. Agglomerations of writings have been forged describing its powerful rhetoric. A substantial component has concentrated on the symbiotic relationship between the Gettysburg Address, Lincoln, and the North’s acumen for combating jingoistic Confederates. Garry Wills, in The Words that Remade America, describes The Gettysburg Address as the embodiment of the strategy of the North. For Wills it was bipartite. When Lincoln stated “a new birth of freedom”, Wills affirms, the nation’s commitment to abolishing slavery. Furthermore, Wills argues that Lincoln does more than this, by executing a “slight of hand trick”. By citing the Declaration