Poems on the Underground 1986-2025
Poems on the Underground Archive of all the poems displayed on London Underground from 1986 to 2024.
Set 1 January 1986
Up in the Morning early by Robert Burns
Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley
This is Just to Say by William Carlos Williams
The Railway Children by Seamus Heaney
Like a Beacon by Grace Nichols
Set 2 April 1986
Sonnet 29 by William Shakespeare
Her Anxiety by W.B. Yeats
Lady Rogue Singleton by Stevie Smith
The Trees by Philip Larkin
Benediction by James Berry
Set 3 July 1986
The Sick Rose by William Blake
Much Madness is divinest Sense by Emily Dickinson
At Lord’s by Francis Thompson
Rainforest by Judith Wright
Encounter at St Martin’s by Ken Smith
Set 4 October 1986
Western wind when wilt thou blow by Anonymous
Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802 by William Wordsworth
Everyone Sang by Siegfried Sassoon
The Loch Ness Monster’s Song by Edwin Morgan
Living by Denise Levertov
Set 5 January 1987
Holy Sonnet by John Donne
Trail all your pikes by Anne Finch
Alas Alack! by Walter De La Mare
Immigrant by Fleur Adcock
I am Becoming my Mother by Lorna Goodison
Set 6 April 1987
Tagus farewell by Sir Thomas Wyatt
Snow by Edward Thomas
Lines from Endymion by John Keats
Celia Celia and Goodbye by Adrian Mitchell
Ragwort by Anne Stevenson
Set 7 July 1987
The silver swan by Anonymous
So we’ll go no more a-roving by Lord Byron
Teeth by Spike Milligan
To My First White Hairs by Wole Soyinka
Riddle-Me-Ree by Liz Lochhead
Set 8 October 1987
The Expulsion from Eden from Paradise Lost, Book XII by John Milton
There was an Old Man with a beard by Edward Lear
Spring and Fall by G. M. Hopkins
Dog Days by Derek Mahon
The Visitor by Carolyn Forché
Set 9 January 1988
Ariel’s Song by William Shakespeare
Meeting at Night by Robert Browning
Prelude I by T.S. Eliot
London Airport by Christopher Logue
Taid’s Grave by Gillian Clark
Set 10 April 1988
In My Craft or Sullen Art by Dylan Thomas
The Coming of Grendel from Beowulf Anon, Tr. Gerard Benson
Midsummer, Tobago by Derek Walcott
Sonnet from the Portuguese by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Handbag by Ruth Fainlight
Set 11 July 1988
Symphony in Yellow by Oscar Wilde
Sumer is icumen in by Anonymous
Song by W.H. Auden
The Ancients of the World by R. S. Thomas
Day Trip by Carole Satyamurti
Set 12 October 1988
In Time of “The Breaking of Nations” by Thomas Hardy
London Bells by Anonymous
The Tyger by William Blake
Delay by Elizabeth Jennings
Everything Changes by Cicely Herbert
Set 13 January 1989
Roundel from the Parliament of Fowls by Geoffrey Chaucer
Dreams by Robert Herrick
Sonnet (What lips my lips have kissed) by Edna St. Vincent Millay
And Yet the Books by Czeslaw Milosz
The Leader by Roger McGough
Set 14 May 1989
From To the City of London by William Dunbar
On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer by John Keats
A Dead Statesman by Rudyard Kipling
Modern Secrets by Shirley Geok-Lin Lim
Sergeant Brown’s Parrot by Kit Wright
Set 15 October 1989
I have a gentil cock by Anonymous
What Am I After All by Walt Whitman
Piano by D.H. Lawrence
Mmenson by Kamau Brathwaite
The Hitchhikers by Diane Wakoski
Set 16 January 1990
from The Song of Solomon , The King James Bible
You took away all the oceans and all the room by Osip Mandelstam
Wet Evening In April by Patrick Kavanagh
I Saw a Jolly Hunter by Charles Causley
Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers by Adrienne Rich
Set 17 May 1990
Old English Riddle by Anonymous tr. Gerard Benson
Virtue by George Herbert
1915 (I know the truth – give up all other truths!) by Marina Tsvetayeva
Love without Hope by Robert Graves
Full Moon and Little Frieda by Ted Hughes
Set 18 October 1990
Since there’s no help, come let us kiss and part by Michael Drayton
from A Shropshire Lad Into my heart an air that kills by A E Housman
Dolor by Theodore Roethke
The Cries of London by unknown poet
A 14-year old Convalescent Cat in the Winter by Gavin Ewart
Come. And be my baby by Maya Angelou
Set 19 January 1991
Ich am of Irlonde by Anonymous (14th Century)
Song from the Princess by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
The Embankment by T.E. Hulme
Stars & Planets by Norman MacCaig
The Uncertainty of the Poet by Wendy Cope
Set 20 (100 Poems on the Underground) May 1991
I saw a Peacock with a fiery tail by Anonymous
from Frost at Midnight by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Snow by Louis MacNeice
On Himself by David Wright
Sometimes by Sheenagh Pugh
London Bells from Tommy Thumb’s Pretty Song Book , Anon
Set 21 October 1991
The Passionate Shepherd to his Love by Christopher Marlowe
Letter to Andre Billy. 9 April 1915 by Guillaume Apollinaire
Child by Sylvia Plath
A song for England by Andrew Salkey
Letters from Yorkshire by Maura Dooley
Lines from Endymion by John Keats
Set 22 January 1992
The Bonnie Broukit Bairn by Hugh MacDiarmid
To Emilia V- by Percy Bysshe Shelley
Concerto for Double Bass by John Fuller
Words, Wide Night by Carol Ann Duffy
The Lobster Quadrille by Lewis Carroll
This is Just to Say by William Carlos Williams
Set 23 May 1992
I shall say what inordinate love is by Anonymous
A red, red rose by Robert Burns
The Very Leaves of The Acacia-Tree are London by Kathleen Raine
One Art by Elizabeth Bishop
To Someone Who Insisted I Look Up Someone by X J Kennedy
The silver swan by Anonymous
Set 24 October 1992
Two fragments by Sappho translated by Cicely Herbert
I Am by John Clare
Dream Boogie by Langston Hughes
The Unpredicted by John Heath-Stubbs
The Emigrant Irish by Eavan Boland
Prelude 1 by T S Eliot
Set 25 January 1993
from The Garden by Andrew Marvell
The Flaw in Paganism by Dorothy Parker
Anthem for Doomed Youth by Wilfred Owen
A Picture, for Tiantian’s fifth birthday by Bei Dao Translated by Bonnie S. McDougall and Chen Maiping
Idyll by U A Fanthorpe
Western Wind by Anonymous
Set 26 May 1993
Gray goose and gander by Anonymous
On His Blindness by John Milton
He wishes for the Cloths of Heaven by W.B. Yeats
Late Summer Fires by Les Murray
Love in A Bathtub by Sujata Bhatt
Ariel’s Song by William Shakespeare
Set 27 September 1993
The Twa Corbies by Anonymous
The Great Frost by John Gay
If I Could Tell You by W.H. Auden
Spacetime by Miroslav Holub translated by David Young and Dana Habova
Sun a-shine, rain a-fall by Valerie Bloom
Dreams by Robert Herrick
Set 28 January 1994
Sonnet 18 (Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?) by William Shakespeare
A True and Faithful Inventory of the Goods belonging to Dr Swift by Thomas Sheridan
Where Go the Boats? by Robert Louis Stevenson
Thanks Forever by Milton Kessler
Swineherd by Eilean Ni Chuilleanain
Crossing Brooklyn Ferry by Walt Whitman
Set 29 May 1994
The world is too much with us by William Wordsworth
A Birthday by Christina Rossetti
Disillusionment of Ten O’Clock by Wallace Stevens
The Boundary Commission by Paul Muldoon
Arrival 1946 by Moniza Alvi
Celia Celia by Adrian Mitchell
Set 30 September 1994
Now winter nights enlarge by Thomas Campion
Let my Shadow disappear into yours by Par Lagerkvist tr. W. H. Auden & Leif Sjöberg
Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night by Dylan Thomas
Look at all those monkeys by Spike Milligan
Mysteries by Dannie Abse
Rooms by Kathleen Jamie
Set 31 January 1995
The Good Morrow by John Donne
Adlestrop by Edward Thomas
from Requiem by Anna Akhmatova
The Exiles by Iain Crichton Smith
Moonwise by Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze
The Leader by Roger McGough
Set 32 June 1995
My true love hath my heart and I have his by Sir Philip Sidney
Acquainted with the Night by Robert Frost
from Summoned by Bells by John Betjeman
A Glass of Water by May Sarton
Wind by James Fenton
from To Autumn by John Keats
Set 33 November 1995
To My Dear and Loving Husband by Anne Bradstreet
Chorus from a Play by John Dryden
Inversnaid by Gerard Manley Hopkins
Saturday Morning by Hugo Williams
The Undertaking by Louise Gluck
A 14-year old Convalescent Cat in the Winter by Gavin Ewart
Set 34 February 1996
His Return to London by Robert Herrick
I taste a liquor never brewed by Emily Dickinson
The Poet by George Mackay Brown
Greenwich Park by Herbert Lomas
Apology by Mimi Khalvati
So we’ll go no more a-roving by Lord Byron
Set 35 August 1996
Under the greenwood tree by William Shakespeare
Poetry by Pablo Neruda
Memory of My Father by Patrick Kavanagh
Secret Lives by Sian Hughes
Potosi by Pauline Stainer
The Lesson by Tracy Ryan
Set 36 November 1996
My Lefe ys Faren in a Lond by Anonymous
From Ecclesiastes 1.iii-vii, The King James Bible
Nightsong: City by Dennis Brutus
The Rescue by Seamus Heaney
There was an Old Man with a beard by Edward Lear
Set 37 February 1997
Rondel The Weather’s Cast its Coat of Grey by Charles d’Orleans tr. Oliver Bernard
from An Essay on Man by Alexander Pope
The Faun (Le Faune) by Paul Verlaine
Cargoes by John Masefield
Waiting for Rain in Devon by Peter Porter
Wedding by Alice Oswald
Set 38 June 1997
From Mutabilitie by Edmund Spenser
Harvestwoman by Fernando Pessoa
Expectans Expectavi by Anne Ridler
Mama Dot by Fred D’Aguiar
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea by Stephen Knight
Everyone Sang by Siegfried Sassoon
Set 39 October 1997
Sic Vita by Henry King
from Dover Beach by Matthew Arnold
The Reassurance by Thom Gunn
Don’t Call Alligator Long-Mouth Till You Cross River by John Agard
The Language Issue by Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill
The Trees by Philip Larkin
European Poems on the Underground February 1998
On Receiving News of the War by Isaac Rosenberg
My Voice by Partaw Naderi
Parting in Wartime by Frances Cornford
Longings by C.P. Cavafy
Hope by Edith Södergran
Fresh sighs for sale! by Alain Bosquet
25 February 1944 (25 Febbraio 1944) by Primo Levi
A Collector by Erich Fried
Somewhere in the House by Hanny Michaelis
Distances by Philippe Jaccottet
The birds will still sing by Anise Koltz
A Capitalist Society by Vagn Steen translated by Vagn Steen
From March ’79 by Tomas Transtromer
Merlin by Geoffrey Hill
This Moment by Eavan Boland
Everything Changes by Cicely Herbert after Bertolt Brecht Alles Wandelt Sich
Set 40 February 1998
The Gateway by A.D. Hope
I sing of a Maiden by Anonymous
Thread suns by Paul Celan
Peaceful Waters: Variation by Federico Garcia Lorca
25th April 1974 by Sophia de Mello Breyner
Symphony in Yellow by Oscar Wilde
Set 41 June 1998
Song, to Celia by Ben Jonson
Father William by Lewis Carroll
Home-Thoughts, from Abroad by Robert Browning
Fenland Station in Winter by Katherine Pierpont
Monopoly by Paul Farley
Ozymandias P.B.Shelley
Set 42 (1,000 Years of Poetry in English) October 1998
Caedmon’s Hymn by Caedmon Translated by Paul Muldoon
Anglo-Saxon Riddle by Anonymous translated by Kevin Crossley-Holland
from The General Prologue to the Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer
Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare
The Argument of His Book by Robert Herrick
Jerusalem by William Blake
Set 43 February 1999
I would to heaven that I were so much clay by George Gordon (Lord Byron)
from Among School Children by W.B.Yeats
Not Waving but Drowning by Stevie Smith
Map of the New World: Archipelagoes by Derek Walcott
After the Fall by Anne Stevenson
Quark by Jo Shapcott
Set 44 (1,000 Years of Poetry in English) June 1999
Loving the Rituals by Palladas translated by Tony Harrison
Auld Lang Syne by Robert Burns
From St Paul’s Epistle to the Corinthians translated by William Tyndale
from Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey by William Wordsworth
from In Memoriam by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Set 45 (1,000 Years of Poetry in English) October 1999
There came a Wind like a Bugle by Emily Dickinson
First Fig by Edna St Vincent Millay
Song by Elizabeth Bishop
Naima for John Coltrane by Kamau Brathwaite
Season by Wole Soyinka
Prayer by Carol Ann Duffy
The Expulsion from Eden from Paradise Lost by John Milton
Set 46 (1,000 Years of Poetry in English) February 2000
Scel Lem Duib (Season Song) by Anonymous
No man is an island by John Donne
A Song by Laetitia Pilkington
The World’s Great Age Begins Anew (Chorus from Hellas) by Percy Bysshe Shelley
Return to Cornwall by Charles Causley
True Stories (1) by Margaret Atwood
Guinep by Olive Senior
Road by Don Paterson
I have a gentil cock by Anonymous
Set 47 June 2000
from Beowulf by Anonymous translated by Seamus Heaney
Cradle song by Thomas Dekker
For Pero Moniz, Who died at sea by Luis de Camoes translated by Paul Hyland
Eternity by William Blake
The Catch by Simon Armitage
On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer by John Keats
Australian Poems on the Underground
Sunrise Sequence Mudbara Tribe from The Dulngulg Song cycle translated by Ronald M. Berndt
Mountain by Judith Wrigh
Nasturtium Scanned by Judith Rodriguez
Set 48 October 2000
from The Vision of Piers Plowman by William Langland
Fear no more the heat o’ the sun by William Shakespeare
Sea Love by Charlotte Mew
To my Daughter by Stephen Spender
Thaw by David Malouf
Epilogue by Grace Nichols
Young Poets on the Underground
If a boy must wonder by Leon Yuchin Lau
First Contact by Hattie Grunewald
Whalesong by Sophie Stephenson – Wright
Night Caller by Lucy Pogson
The Flags by Matthew Paskins
I Think My Brain Is Coming Out of My Ears by Luke Yates
Set 49 February 2001
A Riddle by John the Giant Killer
February – not everywhere by Norman MacCaig
Peace (after Goethe) by David Constantine
The Present by Michael Donaghy
Seed by Paula Meehan
Set 50 June 2001
What He Said by Cempulappeyanirar Tr. A.K. Ramanujan
The Maydens Came by Anonymous
On a General Election by Hilaire Belloc
from The Mind Is An Ancient and Famous Capital by Delmore Schwartz
Misty by Ruth Padel
A Private Life by John Burnside
Set 51 October 2001
Sonnet 73 by William Shakespeare
The Sunflower by Eugenio Montale
The Sunburst by Michael Longley
Freight Song by Judith Kazantzis
Moonwise by Jean ‘Binta’Breeze
Grass by Carl Sandburg
Set 52 February 2002
Song by George Peele
from The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
They Are Not Long by Ernest Dowson
Should You Die First by Annabelle Despard
New Gravity by Robin Robertson
Up In the Morning Early by Robert Burns
Set 53 June 2002 Commonwealth Poems on the Underground
giovanni caboto / john cabot by Earle Birney (Canada)
Greek Antiquities: First Floor by Lauris Edmond (New Zealand)
Ibadan by J.P. Clark-Bekederemo
Architecture by Dom Moraes (India)
The Palm Trees at Chigawe by Jack Mapanje (Malawi)
Viv by Faustin Charles (Trinidad)
Free by Merle Collins (Grenada)
Indian Cooking by Moniza Alvi
The Exiles by Iain Crichton Smith (trs. from Gaelic)
Set 54 October 2002
A Tune by Arthur Symons
Fine Knacks for Ladies by Anon
Sonnet on Chillon by Lord Byron
Accordionist by George Szirtes
Notes from a Tunisian Journal by Rita Dove
August 1914 by Isaac Rosenberg
Young Poets on the Underground
Under the Stairs by Caitlin McLeod
Dockside by Anna Ahmed
The End of Every Field by Qian Xi Teng
European poems on the Underground February 2003
From “ Inferno” by Dante Alighieri
The waves, blue walls by Rafael Alberti
Miracle by Yannis Ritsos Tr. Rae Dalven
In the Poem by Sophia de Mello Breyner
Let a place be made by Yves Bonnnefoy Tr. Anthony Rudolf
The Aegean by Maria Luisa Spaziani
Bonnard by Elizabeth Jennings
Almost without noticing by Eira Stenberg
Optimistic Little Poem by Magnus Enzensberger
Set 55 June 2003
from “The Anniversary” by John Donne
The Negro Speaks of Rivers by Langston Hughes
Homage to the British Museum by William Empson
Coda by Louis MacNeice
Poetry by Saadi Youssef
The London Eye by Patience Agbabi
Set 56 October 2003
Sonnet 65 by William Shakespeare
I gave my love a cherry by Anonymous
Dream by Kathleen Raine
Exodus by Lotte Kramer
The Bee Dance by Ken Smith
Infant Joy by William Blake
Set 57 February 2004
Emmonsails Heath in Winter by John Clare
The Lake Isle of Innisfree, by W B Yeats
I May, I Might I Must, by Marianne Moore
Separation by W.S.Merwin
N.W.2: Spring by A.C. Jacobs
I Am Becoming My Mother by Lorna Goodison
Set 58 June 2004
Roundel by Geoffrey Chaucer
I saw a man pursuing the horizon by Stephen Crane
Cut Grass by Philip Larkin
The Two Apes of Brueghel by Wislawa Symborska
Once after Pushkin by Carol Rumens
Web by Don Paterson
Set 59 October 2004
The Long War by Laurie Lee
Autumn Evening – A crow on a Bare Branch by Matsuo Basho
On Lake Nicaragua by Ernesto Cardenal (b.1925) Translated by the author and Robert Pring-Mill
Poem on the Underground by D. J. Enright
Anti-Slavery Movements by Benjamin Zephaniah
Content by Kate Clanchy
Young Poets on the Underground
Rhapsody by Ben Ziman-Bright
Stitching the Bayeux Tapestry by Rebecca Hawkes
Pigeon Patterns by L. E. Harris
Set 60 February 2005
The Creel by Kathleen Jamie
from “To Althea, from Prison” by Richard Lovelace
Belgrade by Vasko Popa tr. Anne Pennington
Heredity by Thomas Hardy
Personal Column (First Book of Odes) by Basil Bunting
Coltsfoot and Larches by David Constantine
Set 61 June 2005
from Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe
I stepped from Plank to Plank by Emily Dickinson
When I was one-and-twenty by A.E. Housman
Animals by Frank O’Hara
Tides by Jenny Joseph
Canticle by John F. Deane
Set 62 October 2005
If Bach Had Been a Beekeeper by Charles Tomlinson
David’s lament for Jonathan ,King James Bible 1611, II Samuel 1:25 – 27
One Perfect Rose by Dorothy Parker
Words in Time by Archibald MacLeish
The Rainbow comes and goes (From Ode: Intimations of Immortality) by William Wordsworth
My Children by Choman Hardi
Chinese Poems on the Underground
Poems on the Underground celebrated its twentieth birthday with a new display of six Chinese poems as part of the China in London season.
Throughout February, a total of six Chinese poems spanning 2,000 years of Chinese civilisation was on display on London Underground (LU) trains.
Among them were Blue, Blue is the Grass from 19 Old Poems of the Han (1st century AD), translated by Ezra Pound; and New Year 1933 by Lu Xun (1881-1936), translated by WJF Jenner.
In a cultural exchange between Shangai Metro and LU, two of the poems displayed across the Underground network were: The Red Cockatoo by Po Chu-I (AD772-846), translated by Arthur Waley; Listening to a Monk from Shu Playing the Lute by Li Bai (AD701-62), translated by Vikram Seth.
In addition, the following two other Shanghai Exchange poems were exhibited at Charing Cross station: Spring Rain by Du Fu, translated by Kenneth Rexroth; and Taking Leave of a Friend by Li Bai, translated by Ezra Pound.
This coincided with a display of poems by William Wordsworth, William Blake, Percy Shelley and Kathleen Jamie on the Shanghai Metro.
The posters, designed by Tom Davidson, feature specially commissioned calligraphy by Qu Lei Lei
The Red Cockatoo by Po Chu-i
New Year 1933 by Lu Xun
Listening to a Monk from Shu playing the Lute by Li Bai
Blue, blue is the grass (The Beautiful Toilet) by Anonymous
Set 63 February 2006
There was an Old Man of Blackheath by Edward Lear
When I have fears that I may cease to be by John Keats
Birch Canoe by Carter Revard
Promise by Jackie Kay
Poetry by Saadi Youssef
And Yet the Books by Czeslaw Milosz
Set 64 June 2006
Silver by Walter de la Mare
La forza d’un bel viso a che mi sprona? by Michelangelo
Happiness by Stephen Dunn
Sonnet from the Portuguese by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Song: On May Morning by John Milton
Swallows by Owen Sheers
Set 65 October 2006
from The Borough by George Crabbe
Sisu by Lavinia Greenlaw
Prospero’s Farewell by William Shakespeare
City by John Betjeman
The Thing Not Said by E.A. Markham
Reconciliation by Walt Whitman
Set 66 (Love Poems on the Underground) February 2007
A Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns
Close close all night by Elizabeth Bishop
Ballad of the Londoner by James Elroy Flecker
Feste’s Song by William Shakespeare
Lesson by Anne Stevenson
In our Tenth Year by Simon Armitage
Set 67 (African Poems on the Underground) June 2007
Season by Wole Soyinka
I Sing of Change by Niyi Osundare
Tin Roof by Nii Ayikwei Parkes
Et nous baignerons mon amie by Leopold Sedar Senghor
Inside My Zulu Hut by Oswald Mbuyiseni Mtshali
from Poem to Her Daughter by Mwana Kupona binti Msham
Set 68 October 2007
Snow by Louis MacNeice
Rain Travel by W. S. Merwin
lines from Tell Me the Truth About Love by W.H. Auden (1907 – 73)
Ah! Sun – Flower by Wiliam Blake
Heirloom by Anne Hartigan
In the Heart of Hackney by Sebastian Barker
Set 69 February 2008
Winter Travels by Bei Dao Tr. David Hinton with Yanbing Chen
Vase by Yang Lian tr. John Cayley
Maple Bridge Night Mooring by Chang Chi and At Maple Bridge by Gary Snyder
The Man with the Blue Guitar by Wallace Stevens (1879 – 1955)
Bowl by Elizabeth Cook
Set 70 June 2008
The Expulsion from Eden by John Milton
from the Prelude by William Wordsworth
Song from Comus by John Milton
A Musical Note by Elizabeth Smart
Into Rail by John Hegley
Industrial by Frances Leviston
Set 71 October 2008
She Tells Her Love by Robert Graves
They Flee from Me by Sir Thomas Wyatt
The River Road by Sean O’ Brien
On Receiving News of the War by Isaac Rosenberg
My Voice by Partaw Naderi
Parting in Wartime by Frances Cornford
Set 72 February 2009
Tortoise by Judith Chernaik
Alicante by Jacques Prévert
An Old Pit Pony by Paul Muldoon
Brooch by Menna Elfyn
Repeat that, repeat by Gerard Manley Hopkins
A Prehistoric Camp by Andrew Young
Set 73 (London Poems on the Underground) July 2009
And Now Goodbye by Jaroslav Seifert
Like a Beacon by Grace Nichols
from Jerusalem by William Blake
Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802 by William Wordsworth
from Rhymes on the Road by Thomas Moore
After the Lunch by Wendy Cope
Set 74 (Best Poems on the Underground) October 2009
A selection of poems from the ‘Best Poems on the Underground’ anthology
Everyone Sang by Siegfried Sassoon
Sonnet 18 by William Shakespeare
Prayer by Carol Ann Duffy
Her Anxiety by W.B. Yeats
This Is Just to Say by William Carlos Williams
Indian Cooking by Moniza Alvi
Set 75 (Science Poems on the Underground) February 2010
London Underground (LU) is celebrating 350 years of the Royal Society, the world’s oldest science academy, with a new set of poems that reflect on the meaning of science.
This latest collection of poems show the very different responses to science that Blake, Tennyson and four other poets have had to astonishing scientific discoveries made between the 18th and 21st centuries.
Out There by Jamie McKendrick
It looks so simple from a distance… by Anne Stevenson
Fulcrum/ Writing a World by David Morley
In the microscope by Miroslav Holub
from In Memoriam by Alfred Lord Tennyson
from Auguries of Innocence by William Blake
Set 76 (Music Poems on the Underground) June 2010
A collection of six posters with poems about music, from Hardy’s birdsong in ‘Proud Songsters’ to D. H. Lawrence’s tribute to music and memory in ‘Piano’, as well as Gillian Clarke’s ‘Ode to Joy’ (After Schiller), a poem commissioned by Poems on the Underground.
Ode to Joy by Gillian Clarke
Piano by D. H. Lawrence
Caliban by William Shakespeare
Maire Macrae’s Song by Kathleen Raine
Harmonica by Michael Longley
Proud Songsters by Thomas Hardy
Set 77 (Young Poets on the Underground) October 2010
Young Poets on the Underground is a set of six poems, three of which were the winners of the 2010 Poems on the Underground Competition for young poets. A further three are poems by well known poets.
The Way We Go by Katherine Towers
Sweet Thames Flow Softly by Ewan MacColl (1915 – 1989)
For the War Dead by A. E Housman
If a boy must wonder by Leon Yuchin Lau
First Contact by Hattie Grunewald
Whalesong by Sophie Stephenson – Wright
Set 78 (Poems on the Underground celebrating 25 years) February 2011
Lines from Endymion by John Keats
Loving the rituals by Palladas translated by Tony Harrison
Colmcille the Scribe by Seamus Heaney
Lines to a Movement in Mozart’s E-flat Symphony by Thomas Hardy
Riddle by Gerard Benson
For the Life of this Planet by Grace Nichols
Set 79 (Polish Poems on the Underground) June 2011
In June and July 2011, three poems by major Polish poets – ‘Blacksmith Shop’ by Czeslaw Milosz, ‘Nothing Special’ by Zbigniew Herbert and ‘Star’ by Adam Zagajewski — will be on display in Tube trains, marking the centenary of Czesław Miłosz, Nobel Laureate, one of the greatest poets of our time.
The poets were close friends and associates, writing in the dark shadow of Polish suffering during and after the Second World War. Milosz translated the poems of Herbert and introduced Adam Zagajewski to English-speaking readers; Zagajewski wrote the Introduction to Herbert’s Collected Poems. All three poets were ‘makers’ in the oldest sense, artists building a world ‘from remnants’, celebrating the joys of ordinary life despite the ravages of history.
Three poems by British poets continue our theme: the power of poetry to record the world, to ‘tease out the melody’, to give weight to memory and hope:
‘The Windhover’ by Gerard Manley Hopkins, written in Hopkins’ personal language of religious ecstasy
‘At Sixty’ by the Shetlandic poet Christine de Luca, about reaching the age of sixty in the far north. The poem is written in Shetlandic, a Scots dialect still spoken in the Shetland Islands—which just happen to lie on the 60th parallel.
‘Ourstory’ by Carole Satyamurti, a tribute to the unsung ‘awkward women’ whose tenacity helped to liberate the lives of women today.
Star by Adam Zagajewski
Nothing Special by Zbigniew Herbert
The Windhover by Gerard Manley Hopkins
At Sixty by Christine De Luca
Blacksmith Shop by Czeslaw Milosz
Ourstory by Carole Satyamurti
Set 80 (War Poems on the Underground) October 2011
This set of Poems on the Underground commemorates wars past and present and is dedicated to the universal longing for peace.
The Morning After (August 1945) by Tony Harrison
Isaiah 2.4 from the King James Bible
Song in Space by Adrian Mitchell
Lost in France by Ernest Rhys
Futility by Wilfred Owen
Passing-Bells by Carol Ann Duffy
Set 81 (World Poems on the Underground) February 2012
The new set of ‘World Poems on the Underground’ includes poets from India, Turkey, Germany, Pakistan, Guyana and Nigeria
I Sing of Change by Niyi Osundare
Boy with Orange (out of Kosovo) by Lotte Kramer
Finding India in Unexpected Places by Sujata Bhatt
Baku at Night by Nazim Hikmet
Toussaint L’Ouverture Acknowledges Wordsworth’s Sonnet To Toussaint L’Ouverture’ by John Agard
Carving by Imtiaz Dharker
Set 82 June 2012
Posters featuring three poems by William Shakespeare and three by resident Londoners.
Sonnet 18 by William Shakespeare
Under the greenwood tree by William Shakespeare
In the Heart of Hackney by Sebastian Barker
Viv for cricketer, Vivian Richards by Faustin Charles
The Thunderbolt’s Training Manual by Danielle Hope
Puck to Oberon by William Shakespeare
Set 83 (From the Anthology) October 2012
Set of posters taken from the November 2012 Poems on the Underground anthology A New Edition (Particular Books/ Penguin).
The poems are on themes central to the anthology: Love, Seasons, War, Exile and Loss, Music and The Natural World
A song for England by Andrew Salkey
A Dead Statesman by Rudyard Kipling
The Emigrant Irish by Eavan Boland
Concerto for Double Bass by John Fuller
Swallows by Owen Sheers
2013: A year-long celebration of 150 years of London Underground
Set 84 February 2013 : London Then and Now
The first set of Poems on the Underground in 2013 has been specifically chosen to reflect London as it was and London as it is now, in celebration of the 150th anniversary of London Underground.
The six poems reflect typical aspects of London as seen by Londoners and visitors to London, past and present. We also feature the immigrant experience which was so important to post-war London (and the tube in particular)
From The Prelude William Wordsworth
Vacillation W.B.Yeats
Stations Connie Bensley
Gherkin Music Jo Shapcott
Barter Nii Ayikwei Parkes
Bam Chi Chi La La London 1969 Lorna Goodison
Set 85 June 2013: London in motion
Poems on the Underground will be celebrating the 150th anniversary of the great Irish poet W.B. Yeats throughout 2015.
The first set of poems for March 2015 features the final stanza of ‘Sailing to Byzantium’, Yeats’s tribute to the timeless power of imagination, and his popular love poem ‘He wishes for the Cloths of Heaven’.
Also featured are a translation of Antoine O Raifteiri’s Irish verses by Lady Gregory, Yeats’s friend and close associate in the Irish revival; Louis MacNeice’s epigraph to Holes in the Sky (1944); and poems by the distinguished contemporary Irish poets Eavan Boland and Paula Meehan.
The poems will be displayed in London Tube trains from 2 March 2015. Posters, designed by Tom Davidson, are available from the Poetry Society and London Transport Museum.
A leaflet celebrating Irish poetry including these poems and poems by Seamus Heaney, Patrick Kavanagh, and Nuala Ni Dhohmnaill will be free to the public at tube stations in mid-March.
The paperback publication of the Penguin anthology Poems on the Underground will be celebrated on 26 March 2015. The collection includes poems by Yeats and many other Irish poets, including Patrick Kavanagh, Oscar Wilde, Louis MacNeice, Seamus Heaney, Eilean Ni Chuilleanain, Michael Longley, Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill and Paul Muldoon.
From Jerusalem William Blake
At Lord’s Francis Thompson
Buses on the Strand R. P. Lister
The Conversation of Old Men Thom Gunn
Our Meetings Andrew Waterman
Moment in a Peace March Grace Nichols
Set 86 October 2013 : London Underground 150
The final set of poems in 2013 is the climax of a year-long celebration of LU150 – the anniversary of the opening of the Metropolitan line in 1863. The poems, on display for eight weeks from Oct 21, appear with the other poems featured this year in a booklet of London Poems on the Underground, 80,000 copies free to the public at Zone 1 tube stations from 14 October. Three poems in the new set turn tube stations into verse: John Hegley’s specially commissioned poem ‘Thankyou London Underground’, Betjeman’s memory of alighting at every station as a child (with an illustration of ‘The Underground’ by Hugh Casson), and a delightful poem made of station ‘Spoonerisms’ by Brian O’Connor (a poet new to our programme). Contemporary London life is captured in ‘On the Thames’ by Karen McCarthy Woolf, born in London to English and Jamaican parents (illustrated by a ‘River view’ by David Gentleman); and there are two Poems on the Underground ‘staff choices’, Wordsworth’s sonnet ‘On Westminster Bridge’ and a poem from the first set of poems in 1986, ‘Like a Beacon’ by Grace Nichols, evoking the homesickness of a recent immigrant to our great city.
Composed upon Westminster Bridge William Wordsworth
From Summoned by Bells John Betjeman
Spooner Goes Under Brian O’Connor
On the Thames Karen McCarthy Woolf
Thank you London Underground John Hegley
Like a Beacon Grace Nichols
Set 87 January 2014: Greek Poems and Poets
The spring 2014 set of Poems on the Underground is in honour of the Greek EU Presidency (January-June 2014) and in celebration of the enduring ties between Greek culture and our own world
As a gale on the mountainside Sappho tr. Cicely Herbert and
This place is Aphrodite’s Anyte of Tegea ‘’ tr. Peter Constantine
Ionian Song C.P. Cavafy
From “Amorgos” Nikos Gatsos
On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer John Keats
From “Don Juan” Lord Byron
Bread Dipped in Olive Oil and Salt Theo Dorgan
Set 88 June 2014: Welsh Poems and Poets
The summer 2014 set of Poems on the Underground celebrates the centenary of Dylan Thomas
From “Fern Hill” Dylan Thomas
Mysteries Dannie Abse
In a young time Gerard Benson
Six bells Gillian Clarke
Small brown job Gwyneth Lewis
Skirrid Fawr Owen Sheers
Set 89 October 2014 : War Poems
The autumn 2014 set of Poems on the Underground commemorates the centenary of the First World War
In Memoriam (Easter 1915) by Edward Thomas
Bach and the Sentry Ivor Gurney
The General by Siegfried Sassoon
Fratelli/Brothers by Giuseppe Ungaretti translated by Patrick Creagh
Im Osten / In the East by Georg Trakl, a new translation by David Constantine
La Petite Auto/The Little Car by Guillaume Apollinaire translated by the Editors
Set 90 January 2015: Yeats 150 (throughout 2015) and Irish Poetry
The spring 2015 set of Poems on the Underground celebrates the 150th anniversary of the great Irish poet W.B. Yeats
Sailing to Byzantium W.B. Yeats
He wishes for the Cloths of Heaven W.B. Yeats
I am Raftery the Poet Lady Augusta Gregory
What is Truth Louis MacNeice
Legends Eavan Boland
Not Weeding Paula Meehan
Set 91 Yeats 150 Summer Poems on the Underground June 2015
The summer 2015 set of Poems on the Underground continues to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the great Irish poet W.B. Yeats
When You Are Old W.B. Yeats
Westron wynde when wylt thou blow Anon
Cuts Sam Riviere
Had I not been awake Seamus Heaney
Stationery Agha Shahid Ali
from Labour Ward Anna T Szabó
Set 92 October 2015: Young Poets on the Underground
Young Poets on the Underground is a set of six poems, three of which were the winners of the 2015 Poems on the Underground Competition for young poets. A further three are poems by well known poets.
Playtime Matt Broomfield
Boy Imogen Cassels
Circulation Laura Harray
An Irish Airman foresees his Death W.B. Yeats
The Sloth Theodore Roethke
Bam Chi Chi La La: London, 1969 Lorna Goodison
Set 93 January 2016: Repeat of our first set for 30th anniversary of Poems on the Underground 1986 – 2016
This set of poems marks the 30th year of Poems on the Underground – the same poems which launched the popular programme in January 1986.
Up in the Morning Early Robert Burns
Ozymandias Percy Bysshe Shelley
This Is Just to Say William Carlos Williams
The Railway Children Seamus Heaney
Like a Beacon Grace Nichols
Set 94 July 2016 Shakespeare’s 400th Anniversary
This set of poems commemorates the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death. Three works by Shakespeare are featured, as well as three poems written in response to Shakespeare’s works:
Sonnet 116 William Shakespeare
Ariel’s song, from The Tempest William Shakespeare
From King Lear William Shakespeare
With a Guitar, To Jane P.B. Shelley
Hour Carol Ann Duffy, from Rapture
The Sonnets Michael Longley
Set 95 November 2016: London is Open
This set of poems celebrates the Mayor’s campaign, London is Open. These London poems suggest the wonderful diversity of our great city in all its aspects, its people and places, its famous squares, its parks and markets, its vibrant present and its glorious past.
A Trojan Horse in Trafalgar Square George Szirtes –
London Fields Michael Rosen
Chilling Out Beside the Thames John Agard
Our Town with the Whole of India Daljit Nagra
No. 3 from Uses for the Thames Jane Draycott
Autumn Journal Louis MacNeice
Set 96 February 2017: International poetry by Israeli, Palestinian, Italian and British poets
This set of poems celebrates three major international poets of the 20th century: the Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai (1924-2000), the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish (1942-2008) and the Italian poet Salvatore Quasimodo (1901-1968). These poets are profiled alongside three other poets who share an international outlook: W.H. Auden, William Shakespeare and Elizabeth Jennings.
Green the land of my poem Mahmoud Darwish
‘Ein Yahav’ from “ Israeli Travel: Otherness is All, Otherness is Love” Yehuda Amichai
And suddenly it’s evening Salvatore Quasimodo
Fear no more the heat o’ the sun from Cymbeline William Shakespeare
Delay, Elizabeth Jennings
Funeral Blues W.H. Auden
Set 97 August 2017: Indian Poems on the Underground
This set of poems celebrates several distinguished contemporary Indian poets, representing a broad range of voices from the Indian subcontinent and the huge Indian diaspora. Three poems – ‘Pilgrim’, ‘This Morning’, and ‘Approaching Fifty’ – include illustrations taken from David Gentleman’s India, by kind permission of David Gentleman.
Pilgrim Eunice de Souza
This Morning Mona Arshi
Today Sujata Bhatt
The Butterfly Arun Kolatkar
Approaching Fifty Arvind Krishna Mehrotra
Stationery Agha Shahid Ali
Set 98 February 2018 editors’ choice (with two Young Poets Foyle Young Poets of the Year
A new set of Poems on the Underground went live on the tube on 12th February for four weeks. The poems celebrate the strong links between past and present, London and Lithuania, East and West, with young and established poets well represented. This set of Poems on the Underground also celebrates 20 years of The Poetry Society’s Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award, and we are pleased to feature two former winners of the competition, Safrina Ahmed and Kyle Spencer, as well as 2017 judge Sinéad Morrissey.
Layers of Kant reveal Safrina Ahmed
Astral Enlightenment Kyle Spencer
Grasmere Journal, 1801 Sinéad Morrissey
Look there he goes even now, my father Daljit Nagra
Love Hannah Lowe
A Date on Sunday Antanas Šimkus,
Cuckoo (‘Has it flown away’) Fujiwara no Toshinari, translated by Geoffrey Bownas and Anthony Thwaite
Set 99 August 2018 : Windrush 70, A Celebration of Caribbean poetry
The summer set of Poems on the Underground is a celebration of Caribbean poetry, on the occasion of Windrush 70, with poems by James Berry, Andrew Salkey, Jean Binta Breeze, Lorna Goodison, Kwame Dawes and Grace Nichols, The poems reflect on common themes: the dream of awakening in a new world of hope and prosperity; the complex realities of life in the Caribbean and in Britain; the poets’ ties to the old world and the new. Poems will be displayed on London Underground trains in late June-July for four weeks. The poems:
A dream of leavin by James Berry (1924-2017) James Berry spent his childhood in a village in Jamaica, and came to Britain in 1948, working as a telephonist and publishing several volumes of poetry for adults and children. He edited the first collections of poems by British/West Indian poets, and was a much-loved figure as poet and reader.
History and Away by Andrew Salkey (1928-1995) Andrew Salkey, raised in Jamaica, later attended the University of London and became part of the London community of emerging West Indian writers as author, anthologist and editor. He contributed to the BBC as an interviewer, critic, and author of many radio plays and features.
dreamer by Jean Binta Breeze Brought up by her grandparents in rural Jamaica, Jean Binta Breeze studied at the Jamaican School of Drama and is a popular poet and performer both in Jamaica and England, where she has lived since the 1970s, Her most recent collection is The Arrival of Brighteye and Other Poems,
Dew by Kwame Dawes Recognised as one of the Caribbean’s leading writers, Kwame Dawes has written over thirty books. His collection Wheels includes a series of poems paying homage to the people of Haiti after the earthquake of 2010.
I Am Becoming my Mother by Lorna Goodison. Born in Kingston in 1947, Lorna Goodison is a much-published poet, short story writer, and artist. She taught at the University of Michigan, and now divides her time between Canada and Jamaica, where she has recently been appointed Poet Laureate.
Epilogue by Grace Nichols Born in Guyana in 1950, Grace Nichols has lived in Britain since 1977. A prize-winning poet, children’s author and novelist, she is widely recognised for her inspiring readings and the range and charm of her writings.
A dream of leavin James Berry (1924-2017)
History and Away Andrew Salkey (1928-1995)
dreamer Jean Binta Breeze
Dew Kwame Dawes
I Am Becoming my Mother Lorna Goodison.
Epilogue Grace Nichols
Set 100 November 2018: Armistice, November 1918
This set of poems is on the London Underground from November until mid-December 2018. The poems mark the centenary of the Armistice of November 1918, and also look towards the future – the wars that followed ‘the war to end war’, and the instinct of each new generation to hope for a renewal of life.
Everyone Sang Siegfried Sassoon
Thaw Edward Thomas, killed on 9 April 1917 during the Battle of Arras
Heroes Kathleen Raine
Armistice Day Charles Causley
The place where we are right Yehuda Amichai
Inscription for a War A.D. Hope, with the famous ‘Inscription at Thermopylae’: Stranger, go tell the Spartans / we died here obedient to their commands
Set 101 February 2019 : Love, then and now
John Anderson, my jo, Robert Burns
Meeting at Night, Robert Browning
Wild Nights! Emily Dickinson
Hops Boris Pasternak, translated from Russian by Jon Stallworthy and Peter France
The Present, by Michael Donaghy
India, by Jane Draycott
A leaflet of twenty-four Love Poems on the Underground, with several from our earlier sets of poems, is available free at tube stations during February and March 2019.
Set 102 July 2019: : The Natural World
A new set of five poems goes live on London tubes on 1 July 2019 for four weeks. The poems all explore the relationship between human beings and the natural world. Some deal specifically with the urgent issue of climate change. Others reflect more generally on the ways in which human beings take solace and meaning from their living world of earth, sea and sky.
The Meaning of Existence Les Murray
Still Life with Sea Pinks and High Tide Maura Dooley
I Am the Song Charles Causley
The shaft Helen Dunmore
My life closed twice before its close Emily Dickinson
Set 103 November 2019: : Time and memory
A new set of six poems made their way round London’s tube system this November. The poems aim to cheer up commuters suffering from short days, grey skies, and the daily assault of world and national news. The themes were time and memory, addressed in poems which speak to readers of all ages and backgrounds.
Music when soft voices die P.B. Shelley
All Souls Night Frances Cornford
My Father Yehuda Amichai
Suddenly Salvatore Quasimodo
Diary Katrina Naomi
For the House Sparrow in Decline Paul Farley
Set 104 February 2020: Love and Nature, youth and age
A new set of Poems on the Underground will be posted in tube trains on 10 February 2020 for four weeks. The poems, serious and humorous, touch on themes of love, nature, youth and age, and the changing seasons, as the dark days of February give way to early signs of spring.
Sonnet 98 (‘From you I have been absent in the spring’) William Shakespeare
Honesty, from ‘Talking to the Weeds’, Kit Wright
The Gulls Jacob Polley
Prayer for My Father as a Child Miriam Nash
Fear Ciaran Carson
Perseverance Marin Sorescu, translated by D.J. Enright
Set 105 August 2020 : Poems of hope in difficult times
In the Spring and Summer of 2020, a new set of Poems on the Underground went live. They aimed to lift the spirits of key-workers and other passengers during the pandemic
And if I speak of Paradise Roger Robinson
Cordón Laura Chalar, translated by Erica Mena
Everything Changes Cicely Herbert
London Fields Michael Rosen
Note Leanne O’Sullivan
Time to be slow John O’Donohue
Set 106 October/November 2020 : Poems for Black History Month
November 2020 We continue to celebrate Black poets with six poems included in October’s Black History Month leaflet, now available free at London tube stations – poems by Jamaican poet laureate Lorna Goodison, Barbadian Kamau Brathwaite, James Berry, who was part of the Windrush generation who helped to rebuild Britain after the war, Ghanaian Kwame Dawes, Nigerian Niyi Osundare and a new voice in our programme, Nick Makoha, born in Uganda. To mark Armistice Day, we are reprinting war poems displayed from 2014-2018 to commemorate the First World War, and touching on wars from the earliest times to the present. We follow the war poems with some more ‘favourites’ from earlier sets.
Naima Kamau Brathwaite
Benediction James Berry
I am Becoming my Mother Lorna Goodison
I Sing of Change Niyi Osundare
BOM Mumbai Airport Nick Makoha
Dew Kwame Dawes
Set 107 February 2021 : John Keats. Bicentenary of his death
From 8 February 2021, a new set of Poems on the Underground will go live on tube cars throughout the month, and into March, celebrating 200 years of John Keats’s legacy. In addition to two poems by Keats, we have a stanza from Shelley’s Adonais, and poems by contemporary poets on themes that were important to Keats, especially his love of the natural world.
from ‘Endymion’ John Keats
When I have fears that I may cease to be John Keats
from Adonais Percy Bysshe Shelley
Wish You Were Here Julia Fiedorczuk, translated by Bill Johnston
rising Jean Binta Breeze
I go inside the tree Jo Shapcott
Set 108 Summer 2021
As we mark 35 years of Poems on the Underground, we are delighted to offer tube travellers a summer set of poems by an international range of poets.
These poems can be found on London Underground cars throughout July.
Remembering Summer by the American poet W.S. Merwin, from Garden Time (Bloodaxe Books 2016)
Her Glasses by Pascale Petit, who is of French/Welsh/Indian heritage. Reprinted by permission of Bloodaxe Books from Tiger Girl (2020)
In the Bright Sleeve of the Sky from Deaf Republic (Faber 2019) by Ilya Kaminsky, who lost his hearing at the age of four – born in the Ukraine, emigrated with his family to America
Consider the Grass Growing by the Irish poet Patrick Kavanagh. Reprinted from Collected Poems edited by Antoinette Quinn (Allen Lane, 2004) by kind permission of the Trustees of the Estate of the late Katherine B. Kavanagh, through the Jonathan Williams Literary Agency.
An epigram from The Greek Anthology by Anyte of Tegea, translated by David Constantine (‘Midsummer in the leaves there’s a murmuring breath of air’)
Black Ink by the Iraqi poet Fawzi Karim, from Incomprehensible Lesson (Carcanet 2019)
Set 109 Autumn 2021
A new set of poems will be circling London Underground trains throughout November 2021. As the year draws to a close, poems by the Scottish makar Jackie Kay and the distinguished Jamaican poet Linton Kwesi Johnson celebrate the enduring value of our closest human relationships. And well-loved poems by Keats and Hopkins, alongside new poems by Laurel Prizewinners Seán Hewitt and Sean Borodale, remind us of the glory and fragility of the natural world.
The poems featured in November 2021:
The final stanza of Inversnaidby Gerard Manley Hopkins. While Hopkins served as a priest in Glasgow, he visited the famous wetlands of Inversnaid, near Loch Lomond.
What would the world be, once bereft / Of wet and of wildness? Let them be left, / O let them be left, wildness and wet; / Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet.
The last stanza of Keats’s poem To Autumn, as moving now as it was when Keats wrote it two hundred years ago, aware that he probably had not long to live.
Where are the songs of spring? Ay, where are they? Think not of them, thou hast thy music too, —
Beacon of Hope by Linton Kwesi Johnson (for his close friend and mentor, John La Rose):
welcome nocturnal friend / I name you beacon of hope…as you guide us beyond the stars / to a new horizon (Selected Poems, Penguin 2006)
Leaf by Seán Hewitt
For how each leaf traps light as it falls. / For even in the nighttime of life / it is worth living, just to hold it. (Tongues of Fire, Cape 2020)
Hot Bright Visionary Flies by Sean Borodale
One day, it will stop: / The air will stop; the light will stop. (Inmates, Penguin 2020)
Promise by Jackie Kay
Fill your glass. Here’s tae us. Promises / made to be broken, made to last. (Darling: New & Selected Poems, Bloodaxe 2007)
Inversnaid by Gerard Manley Hopkins
From To Autumn by John Keats
Beacon of Hope (for John La Rose) by Linton Kwesi Johnson
Leaf by Seán Hewitt
Hot Bright Visionary Flies by Sean Borodale
Promise by Jackie Kay
Set 110 February 2022
A new set of poems on love, music, and the coming of spring will be on London Underground trains from February 14th.
We hope tube travellers will enjoy poems by Sasha Dugdale, Derek Walcott, Grace Nichols, Martin Bell and Raymond Antrobus
We are also marking the bicentenary of the death of the Romantic poet P B Shelley with the last stanza of his Ode to the West Wind, with famous lines which speak to all of us: ‘O Wind, If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?’
The poems will be circulating on Underground and Overground trains through February and March.
The poems featured in February:
Private Ownership by Sasha Dugdale Reprinted by permission of Carcanet from Notebook (2003)
Love after Love by Derek Walcott Reprinted by permission of Faber from Collected Poems (1986)
Praise Song for My Mother by Grace Nichols Reprinted by permission of Curtis Brown from I Have Crossed an Ocean: Selected Poems (Bloodaxe 2010)
The Songs by Martin Bell Reprinted by permission of Bloodaxe Books from Complete Poems (1988)
Upwards (forTy Chijioke) after Christopher Gilbert by Raymond Antrobus Reprinted by permission of Picador from All the Names Given (2021)
from Ode to the West Wind by Percy Bysshe Shelley
Set 111 July 2022
‘My name is OZYMANDIAS, King of Kings:
Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!’
We are delighted to offer tube travellers a new summer set of poems.
The poems will circulate on London Underground and Overground trains for 4 weeks from July 18th.
Shelley’s sonnet Ozymandias, inspired by the Egyptian ruins at the British Museum, marks the bicentenary of the poet’s death on July 8th, 1822, aged 29.
Our international theme continues with famous lines by the 17th century Dean of St Pauls, John Donne: ‘No man is an island, entire of itself…’ from meditation 17, Devotions upon Emergent Occasions
Also featured: ‘Caterpillar’ by Guillaume Apollinaire, in a new version by the British poet and translator Robert Chandler. Reprinted by permission of Robert Chandler from Guillaume Apollinaire, Poems, translated by Robert Chandler (Everyman 2000)
An extract from War of the Beasts and the Animals by the dissident Russian poet Maria Stepanova, translated by Sasha Dugdale. Reprinted by permission of Bloodaxe Books from Maria Stepanova, War of the Beasts and the Animals, trans. Sasha Dugdale (2021)
‘Ditches’ by the Irish poet Jessica Traynor. Reprinted by permission of Bloodaxe Books from Pit Lullabies (2022)
‘Dei Miracole’ by the popular poet, playwright and broadcaster Lemn Sissay. Copyright © Listener by Lemn Sissay, 2008. First published in Great Britain by Canongate Books Ltd.
Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley
No Man is an Island by John Donne
Caterpillar La Chenille by Guillaume Apollinaire, translated by Robert Chandler
from War of the Beasts and the Animals by Maria Stepanova, translated by Sasha Dugdale
Ditches by Jessica Traynor
‘Dei Miracole’ by Lemn Sissay
Set 112 November 2022
O wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn’s being,
Thou, from whose unseen presence the leaves dead
Are driven, like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing,
We are delighted to offer tube travellers a new autumn set of poems which show how interconnected we are, to the natural world, to our families and to the wider world.
The poems will circulate on London Underground and Overground trains for 4 weeks from November 7th.
To end our celebration of the bicentenary of Shelley’s death, we feature the first stanza of his greatest poem Ode to the West Wind. Included too are Jackie Kay’s warm tribute to her parents as they set off for yet another anti-war protest and poems by four poets new to our programme, Jo Clement, Romalyn Ante, Kerry Shawn Keys and Cyril Wong.
from Ode to the West Wind by P.B. Shelley
George Square by Jackie Kay Reprinted by permission of Bloodaxe Books from Darling: New & Selected Poems (2007)
Paisley by Jo Clement Reprinted by permission of Bloodaxe Books from Outlandish (2022)
from Invisible Women by Romalyn Ante Reprinted by permission of Chatto & Windus from Antiemetic for Homesickness (2020)
Vesper by Kerry Shawn Keys Reprinted by permission of the author Kerry Shawn Keys (2020)
Crow by Cyril Wong Reprinted by permission of Math Paper Press from Animal Season (2020)
from Ode to the West Wind by P.B. Shelley
George Square by Jackie Kay
Paisley by Jo Clement
from Invisible Women by Romalyn Ante
Vesper by Kerry Shawn Keys Reprinted by permission of the author Kerry Shawn Keys (2020)
Crow by Cyril Wong
Set 113 February 2023
As we mark the 160th anniversary of London Underground, a new set of Poems on the Underground goes live on London Underground and Overground cars on Monday 27 February 2023, for four weeks.
Londoners will be greeted by a favourite Shakespearean heroine, Perdita, as she welcomes the flowers of spring: ‘Daffodils, that come before the swallow dares, and take the winds of March with beauty’ – from The Winter’s Tale.
Chaucer appears alongside Shakespeare in his ballad Truth (‘Flee from the press and dwell with truthfulness’) – as relevant today as it was in the 14th century.
Four poets new to the tube are also featured, in poems of love, separation and exile:
What I know of the sea by İlhan Sami Çomak , a Kurdish poet writing from a Turkish prison, where he has been held for 29 years. His poems are translated by Caroline Stockford. ‘What I know of love is so little! Yet I’m constantly thinking of you!’
Bond by Diana Anphimiadi, a Georgian poet of Greek ancestry, translated by Natalia Bukia-Peters and Jean Sprackland: ‘When I leave, your words follow – you are mine! You know I’ll always come back.’
For My Wife, Reading in Bed by the Scottish poet John Glenday: ‘What else do we have but words and their absences / to bind and unfasten the knotwork of the heart?’
[Clearance] by the Zambian-born British poet Kayo Chingonyi, a light-hearted take on dispossession: ‘What need have we for these ornaments, old textbooks, the wedding dress you never wore?’
Poems on the Underground is supported generously by TfL, Arts Council England and The British Council.
from The Winter’s Tale by William Shakespeare
What I know of the sea by İlhan Sami Çomak translated by Caroline Stockford
Truth by Geoffrey Chaucer
For My Wife, Reading in Bed by John Glenday
Bond by Diana Anphimiadi translated by Natalia Bukia-Peters and Jean Sprackland
Clearance by Kayo Chingonyi
Set 114 June 2023
Celebrating Windrush 75
This summer Poems on the Underground marks the 75th anniversary of the arrival of the Windrush in Britain, bringing men, women and children from the Caribbean to help rebuild a war-ravaged country.
British poetry has gained immeasurably from the contribution of Caribbean and Black British voices of the most eloquent, wide-ranging and diverse kinds, reaching the widest possible audience. We are happy to join the Windrush 75 network in celebrating our common humanity.
From June 19th through July, London Underground and Overground cars will feature poets with close Caribbean and British links
Look out for our new set of Summer poems on London Underground and Overground trains from June 19th.
You can see our new poems for Summer 2023 here
James Berry, ‘Sea-Song One’ from Windrush Songs, in The Story I Am In: Selected Poems (Bloodaxe Books 2011)
John Agard, ‘Windrush Child’ (for Vince Reid, the youngest passenger on the Windrush, then aged 13), from Alternative Anthem (Bloodaxe Books 2009)
Benjamin Zephaniah, ‘The London Breed’ from Too Black, Too Strong (Bloodaxe Books 2001)
Louise Bennett, ‘Colonization in Reverse’ from Jamaica Labrish (1966)
Kei Miller, ‘The only thing far away’ from There Is an Anger that Moves (Carcanet 2007)
Grace Nichols, ‘Bourda’ from Passport to Here and There (Bloodaxe Books 2020)
James Berry, ‘Sea-Song One’ from Windrush Songs, in The Story I Am In: Selected Poems (Bloodaxe Books 2011)
John Agard, ‘Windrush Child’ (for Vince Reid, the youngest passenger on the Empire Windrush, then aged 13), from Alternative Anthem (Bloodaxe Books 2009)
Benjamin Zephaniah, ‘The London Breed’ from Too Black, Too Strong (Bloodaxe Books 2001)
Louise Bennett, ‘Colonisation in Reverse’ from Jamaica Labrish (1966)
Kei Miller, ‘The only thing far away’ from There Is an Anger that Moves (Carcanet 2007)
Grace Nichols, ‘Bourda’ from Passport to Here and There (Bloodaxe Books 2020)
Set 115 autumn 2023
New Poems on the Underground Autumn 2023
We are delighted to offer tube travellers a new autumn set of Poems on the Underground with poems by Seamus Heaney, Garous Abdolmalekian tr. Idra Novey & Ahmad Nadalizadeh, Anthony Joseph, Helen Ivory, Charles Simic and Karl Shapiro.
Look out for the new set of Poems on the Underground on London Underground and Overground trains from 26th October
Axe by Anthony Joseph Reprinted by permission of Bloomsbury from Sonnets for Albert (2022)
Anthony Joseph is a Trinidad-born poet, novelist, academic and musician. His Sonnets for Albert is the winner of the 2023 T S Eliot Prize.


In a Loaning by Seamus Heaney Reprinted by permission of Faber from District and Circle (2006)
‘It delights me that ‘The Loaning’ might work for you. It’s a strange wee thing, which is why I trust it, but it might be, for the travellers, ‘a puzzle-the-world.’ (Seamus Heaney writing about ‘In a Loaning’, which he wrote when recovering from a stroke).


from Elegy for a Dead Soldier by Karl Shapiro
Reprinted by permission of University of Illinois Press from The Wild Card: Selected Poems, Early and Late (1998)
Karl Shapiro was an American Poet laureate and won a number of major poetry awards in the 1940s, including the Pulitzer Prize, a Guggenheim fellowship, an Academy of Arts and Letters Grant, and the Contemporary Poetry Prize


Long Exposure by Garous Abdolmalekian Translated from Persian by Idra Novey & Ahmad Nadalizadeh Reprinted by permission of Penguin from Lean Against This Late Hour (2020).
Garous Abdolmalekian is an Iranian poet living in Tehran. He is the author of five poetry books and the recipient of the Karnameh Poetry Book of the Year Award and the Iranian Youth Poetry Book Prize


The Square of the Clockmaker by Helen Ivory Reprinted by permission of SurVision from Maps of the Abandoned City, SurVision Books (2019)
Helen Ivory is a poet and visual artist, the author of five books of poetry, most recently The Anatomical Venus.


Empires by Charles Simic Reprinted by permission of Faber from Selected Poems 1963-2003 (2004)
Charles Simic (1938-2023) was a distinguished Serbian-American poet, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the PEN International prize for translation. Seamus Heaney said of his writing that it “comes dancing out on the balls of its feet, colloquially fit as a fiddle, a sparring partner for the world” – a poem in itself.


New spring Poems on the Underground
Set 116 Spring poems on the Underground February 2024
Our first set of Poems on the Underground in 2024 goes live on London Underground and Overground cars from 26 February throughout March. As Spring approaches, the common theme is LOVE — of persons and places, welcomed, scorned, remembered, rediscovered. We’re also marking the bicentenary of Lord Byron, the great Romantic poet who died in Missolonghi in 1824. Emily Bronte, another free spirit, is also featured.
Lord Byron, from Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage
‘I have not loved the world, nor the world me…’
Emily Bronte, Riches I hold in light esteem
‘Riches I hold in light esteem / And Love I laugh to scorn…’ Byron’s character also marks Emily Bronte’s novel Wuthering Heights.
Marjorie Lotfi, Packing for America (my father in Tabriz, 1960)
‘He can’t take his mother in the suitcase…’
Marjorie Lotfi, born in New Orleans to an Iranian father and American mother; now lives in Edinburgh. Reprinted by permission of Bloodaxe Books from The Wrong Person to Ask (2023)
The Weight of the World by Seni Seneviratne
‘Oh, how they blew like vast sails in the breeze, / my mother’s wet sheets . . .’
Seni Seneviratne draws widely on her English and Sri Lankan heritage in her poems.
Reprinted by permission of Peepal Tree Press from Unknown Soldier (2019)
‘I will be faithful to you, I do vow, /but not until the seas have all run dry…’
Ian Duhig, an award-winning poet of great range and diversity, was born in London to Irish parents, the 8th of 11 children. Reprinted from New and Selected Poems (Picador 2021)
‘That morning I heard water being poured into a teapot…’
The American poet Robert Bly was a political activist, founder of ‘American Writers against the Vietnam War’ as well as a much-loved writer of prose and poetry. ‘The Teapot’ was published in Talking into the Ear of a Donkey, Copyright © 2011 by Robert Bly. Reprinted by permission of Georges Borchardt, Inc. on behalf of the author’s estate.
Set 117 Summer Poems on the Underground, June 2024
Our summer Poems on the Underground go live on London Underground and Overground cars on Monday June 3rd for four weeks. We are delighted to welcome the joys of summer and its special music with a truly international set of poems: a tribute to the great American jazz greats by the Ghanaian-British poet Nii Ayikwei Parkes; a 13th-century round, also known as the Cuckoo Song; a love poem by Azita Ghahreman, an Iranian poet writing in Persian; Don Paterson’s version of a sonnet to Orpheus by the great Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke; A E Housman’s lament from A Shropshire lad; and an extract from the late Benjamin Zephaniah’s celebration of our common origins as ‘refugees’.
The poems:
A Glimpse by Azita Ghahreman, translated from the Persian by Elhum Shakerifar and Maura Dooley Reprinted with permission from Negative of a Group Photograph (Poetry Translation Centre / Bloodaxe Books, 2018)
from We Refugees by Benjamin Zephaniah Reprinted by permission of Penguin Books from Wicked World (Puffin, 2000).
By Yourself, Boy. . . (1988-2007) by Nii Ayikwei Parkes Reprinted by permission of Peepal Tree Press from The Makings of You(2010)
The Isle of Portland by A.E. Housman, from A Shropshire Lad
‘Sumer is icumen in’ Anon 13 Century Music manuscript by permission of The British Library Board, BL Harley 978f.1.1v
Taste by Don Paterson Reprinted by permission of Faber & Faber from Orpheus: A Version of Rilke’s ‘Die Sonette an Orpheus’ (2006)
A Glimpse by Azita Ghahreman, translated from the Persian by Elhum Shakerifar and Maura Dooley
A Glimpse read in Persian by Azita Ghahreman
A Glimpse by Azita Ghahreman read by Maura Dooley
from We Refugees by Benjamin Zephaniah
By Yourself, Boy. . . (1988-2007) by Nii Ayikwei Parkes
By Yourself Boy…. read by Nii Ayikwei Parkes
The Isle of Portland by A.E. Housman


The Isle of Portland by A.E. Housman read by Maura Dooley
‘Sumer is icumen in’ Anon


Taste by Don Paterson
Set 118 Autumn Poems on the Underground, October 2024
Our autumn Poems on the Underground go live on London Underground and Overground cars on Monday, October 21st, for four weeks. Fleur Adcock (1934-2024) celebrated her 90th birthday in February with the publication of her Collected Poems. Her poem Immigrant was one of the earliest Poems on the Underground in 1987 and we are pleased to have her poem Dragonfly in our autumn Poems on the Underground
We are delighted to include poems by Foyle Young Poets Arthur Lawson and Dawn Sands, as well as international poems by the late American writer Raymond Carver, the South African poet Gabeba Baderoon, and the great Russian poet Osip Mandelstam.
The poems:
Dragonfly by Fleur Adcock Reprinted by permission of Bloodaxe Books from Collected Poems (2024)
Late Fragment by Raymond Carver Reprinted by permission of Vintage from All of Us: Collected Poems (1997)
Goldfinch, friend, I’ll cock my head— by Osip Mandelstam, translated from the Russian by Andrew Davis Reprinted by permission of New York Review Books from Osip Mandelstam, Voronezh Notebooks (2016). The Voronezh Notebooks were written in exile between 1935 and 1937. Mandelstam died in 1938, sentenced to hard labour for writing anti-Stalin poems.
Always for the First Time by Gabeba Baderoon Reproduced with the permission of Kwela, an imprint of NB Publishers from The Dream in the Next Body (2005)
Anglerfish by Arthur Lawson. Arthur is a 19-year-old poet from Northamptonshire. In 2023, Arthur was commended in the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award
Epilogue by Dawn Sands. Dawn is a 17-year-old poet from Portsmouth. In 2023, Dawn was a winner of the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award.
Dragonfly by Fleur Adcock
Late Fragment by Raymond Carver
Goldfinch, friend, I’ll cock my head— by Osip Mandelstam, translated from the Russian by Andrew Davis
Always for the First Time by Gabeba Baderoon
Anglerfish by Arthur Lawson
Epilogue by Dawn Sands
Set 119 Spring Poems on the Underground February 2025
‘O Wind, If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?’
On 24th February, the latest series of Poems on the Underground will be launched on London Underground and Overground trains. The poems are a strongly international set, with poems by the dissident Chinese poet Bei Dao, the Indian poet Sujata Bhatt, and the Chinese-American poet Li-Young Lee. Also featured are the Scottish poet Niall Campbell and the Foyle Young Poet Lewis Corry, alongside the great 17th century religious poet George Herbert. The poems share common themes as they celebrate new life and the renewal of nature as spring returns.
The poems:
from Sidetracks by Bei Dao, translated by Jeffrey Yang. Reprinted by permission of Carcanet from Sidetracks (2024) Text copyright © Zhao Zhenkai 2024 Translation copyright © Jeffrey Yang 2024
One Heart by Li-Young Lee from Book of My Nights. Copyright © 2001 by Li-Young Lee. Reprinted with the permission of The Permissions Company, LLC on behalf of BOA Editions, Ltd. boaeditions.org
February Morning by Niall Campbell Reprinted by permission of Bloodaxe Books from Noctuary (2019)
Ther is No Rose of Swych Virtu by Sujata Bhatt Reprinted by permission of Carcanet from Collected Poems (2013)
2013, and Daedalus never moved away for work by Lewis Corry, Foyle Young Poets
from Sidetracks by Bei Dao, translated by Jeffrey Yang
February Morning by Niall Campbell
Ther is No Rose of Swych Virtu by Sujata Bhatt
2013, and Daedalus never moved away for work by Lewis Corry
Set 120 summer Poems on the Underground June 2025
The summer Poems on the Underground go live on Underground and Overground trains on June 2nd
Our summer poems are an international set linked by common themes with universal appeal. All six poems address the relationship of human life to the natural world, as it unfolds in ‘sea and sky and trees’. A Young Poet on the Underground, Anna Gilmore Heezen, observes a housefly in August heat; the British-Nigerian poet Dr. Gboyega Odubanjo rewrites Genesis for modern times, the South Korean poet Jeongrye Choi is lost in a forest. Tube travellers can imagine Shakespeare’s ‘wild thyme and luscious woodbine, sweet musk-roses and eglantine’; the Chinese poet Po Chui-i’s ‘peach-tree blossom’, and the smell of oranges as recalled by the Palestinian poet Mosab Abu Toha.
The Poems are:
Pane by Anna Gilmore Heezen Young Poets on the Underground
Genesis by Dr. Gboyega Odubanjo Reprinted by permission of Faber & Faber from Adam (2024) © The Estate of Gboyega Odubanjo, 2024
Daughter by Mosab Abu Toha Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins from Forest of Noise (4th Estate 2024)
Forest by Jeongrye Choi Reprinted by permission of Parlor Press from Instances: Selected Poems translated by Brenda Hillman, Wayne de Fremery and Jeongrye Choi (2011)
from A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare
The Red Cockatoo by Po Chu-I Translated by Arthur Waley Reprinted by permission of Estate of Arthur Waley. Calligraphy by Qu Lei Lei
Daughter by Mosab Abu Toha
Genesis by Gboyega Odubanjo
Forest by Jeongrye Choi
from A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare
The Red Cockatoo by Po Chu-I
Pane by Anna Gilmore Heezen
Black History Month leaflet 2020
updated Black History Month leaflet 2023
London Poems on the Underground Leaflet