Ah, foolish traveller! You have been ensnared by the Beast, and now you
must hear his sad story, for the Beast was not always so. Once upon a
time, it was a man called
Mr Jeremy Clegg who worked in advertising, selling poster sites to local
businesses. One afternoon during a particularly sluggish sales
period, he was just passing by the arch when his eye was caught by the
very poster site you can see in the picture. `If I can see that, so
can my customers!' thought Mr Clegg (mildly disorientated by the sudden
overhead rumbling of a large train bound for Berwick-upon-Tweed) which
was a great victory for the power of suggestion, because the poster at
the time read `If you can see this, so can your customers!'. `I know!'
he continued to think, `I can revive my advertising sales by
advertising advertising on poster sites on poster sites!' and in a fit
of enthusiasm, he whipped out his mobile phone and dialled the number
at the bottom of the poster.
Unfortunately, the number he was dialling
was engaged. `Someone might be trying to nab this spot before me.' he
conjectured, and resolved to stand there on guard staring at the
poster, questioning the passers-by and all the time waiting for the
engaged tone to stop. And he waited and he stared and he stared and he
waited and gradually he began to change, in the way that single-minded
people do. His legs merged together from lack of being separated, his
arms became a frame around his neck for holding a phone from lack of
being used for gesticulation, affection or veterinary science, his
eyes went blind from lack of seeing anything other than what was in
front of his nose, and his mouth became stuck in an open position
because his mind was stuck in a closed one. Eventually, all that was
left was an intestinal tract with a strange rectangular ruff, its
original purpose ground down to an unthinking hostile instinct, and
that's how it remains today. Wise and brave locals have longsince
blanked out the poster and removed the mobile phone in order to
prevent this tragedy recurring.
The irony of the whole story is that the poster site was, in fact, the property of a company which had been taken over several years previously by Mr Clegg's employers and had been sitting there unsold for so long that nobody knew about it, mergers and staff turnover in advertising being the way they are. The enquiries number at the bottom of the poster was consequently redirected to the new company and subsequently reredirected to the mobile phone of that afternoon's duty salesman...
Today, the beast's round wide mouth is always open, hoping to find prey in the form of unwary pilgrims blithely wandering under the archway, whistling merrily and heading for Tytler Gardens. Actually, it's the whistling that's the big mistake, because the poor old Beast is blind as a bat and not at all hard to dodge.
You can wander along Abbeyhill towards Spring Gardens if you like, though keep an eye out for footballs flying at you over the school fence and be careful not to be mistaken for a rusty old banger, otherwise you'll end up being resprayed and retuned in one of the many car workshops run by retired superheroes that you'll be passing.
On the right, you can see a road climbing away eastward from the bridge. If you follow it, you can reach the top of Easter Road.
You can even nip up the steps and hop over the fence if you
fancy playing on the railway line, but
watch out for the trains, rumbling electrically to the Big Smoke or
click-clacking their diesel way to Musselburgh, Wallyford, Prestonpans,
Longniddry, Drem and North Berwick. Watch out for grumpy Railtrack
executives too, because the penalty for not being run over is a
£200 fine.