LONDON — Can a few lines of verse, make commuting less worse?
That, in essence, is the question asked four decades ago by Judith Chernaik, an American writer in London who wondered whether posting poems inside subway cars might enlighten, amuse and inspire riders.
The result was Poems on the Underground, a project that turns 40 this year and has been copied in cities around the world. Since 1986, many millions of London Underground passengers have seen posters adorned with poems nestled among the advertisements on their daily journeys.
More than a dozen poets whose work has featured in the project gathered Friday in – where else? – a subway station to celebrate the milestone and pay tribute to Chernaik, who started it all.
The New York native moved to London in the 1970s and fell ''absolutely in love with the city – including its transport system,'' which she found compared favorably to her home city's subway.
''I used the subway all the time in New York,'' she said. ''It was not one of my pleasurable activities.''
Chernaik, a novelist and essayist, also reveled in London's rich literary culture and history.
''Poetry,'' she said, ''is part of the heritage of every Londoner.''