That's why, out of the kind of generosity only an old-fashioned
industry can afford, the British Railways Board decided to build
a loft here for pigeons who had metaphorically as well as literally
reached the end of the line. It's a huge overhead structure, running
right across the street. Pigeons live in it to this very day,
cooing in a unison which warps in and out like some strange machine,
and having a go at the windscreens of private cars passing underneath
out of an atavistic solidarity with their benefactor.
So if you're strolling this way on a rainy day, under the old line
and along Abbeyhill, watch your step because pigeon turd and
rainwater mix to form a truly remarkable lubricant, far better than
anything Fidel Castrol's ever come up with, and entirely biodegradable!
As a matter of fact, that's not the only reason you should watch it if
you're heading that way...
Alternatively, you can slip up Abbey Lane to see what's there, or dander further along Spring Gardens.
Recently, the motorists have been trying to get their own back on the pigeons by crashing into the wall and dislodging them. This tends not to be terribly efficient. More crafty motorists leave hubcaps lying in the middle of the road beneath the bridge. The pigeons mistake the hubcaps for satellite dishes and swoop down, unconstrained in their enthusiasm at the prospect of umpteen-channel entertainment, only to be find themselves flattened by the fiends.