London Metro Waxes Philosophical – We apologise for this delay to your service, but to live is to dream..

June 25, 2009 at 5:12 pm

(Sources: WTOP.com, London Evening Standard & AFP via Google)

London commuters are being offered the words of great thinkers including Shakespeare, Gandhi and Einstein to enliven their sometimes dull journeys on the city’s Tube.

Image Courtesy: Apture - Passengers on Piccadilly Line Train

Instead of simply apologising for delays while the service is regularised, operators can now draw on the wisdom of Greek philosophers and political thinkers and the bon mots of Shakespeare to add variety to the day.

Subway drivers have been given a book of profound sayings, which they are being encouraged to dispense over the intercom, subway operator Transport for London said Thursday.  All have been compiled by Turner Prize-winning artist Jeremy Deller in a passport-sized book which has been distributed to all the drivers and staff on the Piccadilly line. The title of booklet is taken from Shakespeare’s Coriolanus: “What is the City but the People?”    Jeremy Deller said he was motivated by annoyance at the recorded announcements that bombard Tube passengers, such as “Mind the gap” and “Stand clear of the closing doors.”

His original idea _ a day with no announcements _ was rejected by Tube bosses, “so I came up with the idea to give staff a collection of quotes and the idea grew from there.”

“I often wish announcements were more personal and reflected the realities and absurdities of living and working in a big city,” Deller said. “I think the traveling public enjoys some humor and unexpected insight during their journey.”

The sayings include proverbs from around the world _ including Swedish maxim “The afternoon knows what the morning never expected” _ and phrases by the likes of William Shakespeare, W.B. Yeats and Victor Hugo.

Some of the sayings may soothe frustrated riders, like Mahatma Gandhi’s “There is more to life than increasing at speed.” Others may hit too close to home _ how many rush-hour commuters need to be reminded of Jean-Paul Sartre’s opinion that “Hell is other people”?

Driver Susy Wells told the BBC that the sayings helped liven up a job that “can be a little bit monotonous at times.”

“It’s brilliant, and the passengers love it,” she said.

It’s the latest in a series of projects to create art for the Tube’s 3.5 million daily riders. The “Art on the Underground” campaign has seen everything from posters and paintings to a sculptural bust of Jennifer Lopez placed in subway stations across the city.

The art initiative follows “Poems on the Underground,” in which verses are printed on advertising boards inside subway trains. The project has been running since 1986, has spawned a series of books and has been imitated in other cities around the world.

Transport for London said there was no end date for the project but it has asked passengers who hear the announcements to send in their reactions by e-mail.