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War & Peace Quote by William Falconer

"In the time of battle the hammocs, together with their bedding, are all firmly corded, and fixed in the nettings on the quarter-deck, or whereever the men are too much exposed to the view or fire of the enemy"

About this Quote

War gets romanticized as cannon smoke and flags; Falconer gives you cordage, bedding, and a brutally practical kind of poetry. The sentence reads like shipboard housekeeping, but its intent is tactical: a battle-ready vessel is also an improvised machine for keeping bodies from being shredded. Hammocks lashed into the nettings become a makeshift bulwark, padding the quarterdeck against musket fire and splinters. The detail matters because it collapses the distance between sailor and ship: your sleep literally becomes your shield.

The subtext is even darker. Those hammocks aren’t just “bedding”; they are personal property turned into communal armor, pressed into service by necessity. Falconer’s calm, technical diction performs a kind of moral anesthesia: “firmly corded,” “fixed,” “whereever” (with its shrugging misspelling) implies routine, not horror. It’s a survival manual tone, the voice of someone who has seen enough violence to describe it without flinching. That flatness is the sting.

Context sharpens the effect. Falconer was a seaman before he was a poet, and the 18th-century navy ran on labor, discipline, and improvisation. The quarter-deck is also the stage of command and visibility; protecting it “wherever the men are too much exposed” admits a constant vulnerability, an awareness that naval heroics are conducted under the enemy’s gaze. The line quietly rewrites battle as logistics: the difference between life and death is sometimes just how tightly you tie a knot.

Quote Details

TopicWar
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Falconer, William. (2026, January 18). In the time of battle the hammocs, together with their bedding, are all firmly corded, and fixed in the nettings on the quarter-deck, or whereever the men are too much exposed to the view or fire of the enemy. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-the-time-of-battle-the-hammocs-together-with-20492/

Chicago Style
Falconer, William. "In the time of battle the hammocs, together with their bedding, are all firmly corded, and fixed in the nettings on the quarter-deck, or whereever the men are too much exposed to the view or fire of the enemy." FixQuotes. January 18, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-the-time-of-battle-the-hammocs-together-with-20492/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"In the time of battle the hammocs, together with their bedding, are all firmly corded, and fixed in the nettings on the quarter-deck, or whereever the men are too much exposed to the view or fire of the enemy." FixQuotes, 18 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-the-time-of-battle-the-hammocs-together-with-20492/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Falconer: Hammocks as Shipboard Armor
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About the Author

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William Falconer (1732 AC - 1769 AC) was a Poet from Scotland.

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