Maurice Ravel nearly died at around the same time. The tiny-framed composer should have been barred from military service, but, enraged by the bombing of Reims, he enlisted as a truck driver. By the spring of 1916 Ravel was deployed just behind the front lines, and witnessed the ghastly aftermath of the Battle of Verdun. He often had to weave back and forth on pockmarked roads as shells fell all around him. Once he found himself in an abandoned town on a sunny day, walking through the empty, silent streets. "I don't believe I will ever experience a more profound and stranger emotion than this sort of mute terror," he wrote. Another time he entered an abandoned château, found a fine Erard piano, and sat down to play some Chopin.