Having read Abraham Lincoln's address, I noticed these characteristics related to his attempt to engage his audience, his careful phrasings at key moments of this speech and his comparison between the soldiers who died and the audience members who have assembled to honor the war dead. Lincoln stayed on topic and quickly got the audience to get a feel of the nation's situation. The way he talked(tone) during the speech was almost like he was trying to not only inform the crowd listening to him but, to also persuade them to make a change for the better of the nation and of course themselves as a whole community or nation. In paragraph two he immediately engaged the audience as he stated that very moment they were all standing on a battlefield where many soldiers lost their life during war and that now it was part of a graveyard. They gave their life for a "free land." Was it worth it? …show more content…
As I pointed out how he got the audience to engage was very easy for him. The words he used in paragraph two like for example, dedicate, consecrate and hollow. That sentence was said as follows by Lincoln, "But in a larger sense we can not dedicate, we can not consecrate, we can not hollow, this ground." This short sentence is very powerful in the speech. This is the time where he gets their attention and lets the people know to not take granted the land they live on, anything could happen after the war because to begin with the nation was made by the Fathers America to be free and that every men was supposed to be treated/made