Berlin jolly well surprised the heck out of me! And I don’t just mean the transvestites that prop up every bar in the city. For a metropolis with a population of only 3.5m (1.2m of which cross-dress for a living) they have a remarkable work ethic. In a short space of time they have transformed the city, which no longer looks divided, except across gender lines which are as fuzzy as hell. The Wall is now gone, except for a small section which I did my best to demolish. I’m delighted to report that my good friend Angela Merkel has agreed to have a plaque placed up on the spot where ‘Jefrey Archer Demolished The Berlin Wall’. Mary took photographs as I cried ‘Take that, Soviet Union!’ and trod the last of the rubble into the ground as I once helped Margaret put the last the of the British coal industry under our her high heels.
The biggest shock about my holiday in Berlin was the number of art galleries I found on my travels. If you’re in the market for large hipped nymphs splashing around watering holes, then Berlin in the city for you – just be sure that they are nymphs and not some nymph substitutes with sketchy hormones. Did I mention that not all is as it appears in Berlin? I met this young lady smoking a pipe who turned out to be one meat and two vegetables more than she appeared.
Anyway, it was wonderful to see the work of my old friends, Rembrandt, Giotto, and Bellini all on show. I told Mary that we must ask them to dinner in the near future. Mary just gave me a funny look. I didn’t want to make a scene so I left it at that as my guide, Professor Gruber, told me that art is central to the German psychology. I replied that I thought it was third in the list after militarism and a slight tendency towards fascism. What was obvious, though, is that they jolly well know how to hang a canvas. In each of the gallery spaces, I was left alone to examine the paintings. Thankfully, I had managed to persuade the gallery owners to kick out the paying public for my visit. I told them I was a close personal friend of Angela Merkel and threatened to cut off their funding. Amazing what a little bit of name dropping can do. As I told the President of Germany, Horst Köhler, later that day.
After seeing all the art, we were then off to Potsdam where I saw the room where Truman, Churchill and Stalin held their famous meeting. I sat on the chair once filled by Stalin’s ample rear. I was so inspired that I began to develop my own political system which I intended to impose on millions of people across Europe. Unfortunately, Mary spotted what I was up to and ripped up my plan before it reached novel length. Another time, perhaps.
Can I mention the wonderful Chinese Tea Pavillion? It’s in the middle of the garden and the sight of which would be forever alive in the memories of any of the visitors to whom it was then visible... (Damn it, Archer, the prose is flowing like quality vino today!)
Speaking of wine, the food in Berlin was without equal, served by waitresses dressed in traditional costumes. They all smoked pipes and wore beards which led me to suspect that they were more of those cross dresser types that have had me so worried these past five days. Still, they had jolly good pins on them and I told them so later on over pints of Bavarian ale.
All told, it was a jolly good adventure. The German people were all warm, except those that weren’t. They were all polite, except those that were rude. I had to give a few of them a jolly good telling off, explaining the concept of manners to them. Professor Gruber told me that they tended to be from East Berlin and will have suffered years of privation and suffering at the hands of the Soviets. ‘That’s no excuse,’ I replied. ‘I was in the Tory Government for donkey’s years and I still know how to say “please” and “thank you”.’ I think he took my point, which jolly well should have.
Mary sends her love.