flavor of conflicting spices. I should think
it might be sold by the cord, it is piled up in such
quantities; and as it grows old and is much handled,
it acquires that brown, not to say dirty, familiar
look, which may, for aught I know, be one of its chief
recommendations. The cake, however, which prevails
at this season of the year comes from the Tyrol; and
as the holidays approach, it is literally piled up
on the fruit-stands. It is called Klatzenbrod,
and is not a bread at all, but and amalgamation of
fruits and spices. It is made up into small round
or oblong forms; and the top is ornamented in various
patterns, with split almond meats. The color
is a faded black, as if it had been left for some
time in a country store; and the weight is just about
that of pig-iron. I had formed a strong desire,
mingled with dread, to taste it, which I was not likely
to gratify,—one gets so tired of such experiments
after a time—when a friend sent us a ball
of it. There was no occasion to call in Professor
Liebig to analyze the substance: it is a plain
case. The black mass contains, cut up and pressed
together, figs, citron, oranges, raisins, dates, various
kinds of nuts, cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, and I know
not what other spices, together with the inevitable
anise and caraway seeds. It would make an excellent
cannon-ball, and would be specially fatal if it hit
an enemy in the stomach. These seeds invade all
dishes. The cooks seem possessed of one of the
rules of whist,—in case of doubt, play
a trump: in case of doubt, they always put in
anise seed. It is sprinkled profusely in the
blackest rye bread, it gets into all the vegetables,
and even into the holiday cakes.
The extensive Maximilian Platz has suddenly grown
up into booths and shanties, and looks very much like
a temporary Western village. There are shops
for the sale of Christmas articles, toys, cakes, and
gimcracks; and there are, besides, places of amusement,
if one of the sorry menageries of sick beasts with
their hair half worn off can be so classed. One
portion of the platz is now a lively and picturesque
forest of evergreens, an extensive thicket of large
and small trees, many of them trimmed with colored
and gilt strips of paper. I meet in every street
persons lugging home their little trees; for it must
be a very poor household that cannot have its Christmas
tree, on which are hung the scanty store of candy,
nuts, and fruit, and the simple toys that the needy
people will pinch themselves otherwise to obtain.
At this season, usually, the churches get up some
representations for the children, the stable at Bethlehem,
with the figures of the Virgin and Child, the wise
men, and the oxen standing by. At least, the
churches must be put in spick-and-span order.
I confess that I like to stray into these edifices,
some of them gaudy enough when they are, so to speak,
off duty, when the choir is deserted, and there is
only here and there a solitary worshiper at his prayers;