- Headpiece, Chapter 1: Father Rhine
- The Celts
- The Celts migrating
- Happy are the scholars!
- The Tree of Death
- Posthumous drowning
- The Druids arrive
- Headpiece to chapter 2: [Druid human sacrifice]
- [A modern survival of Druid belief]
- Dangerous snakes in the Rhineland
- A battle under the light of the new moon
- The continuing role of the Druidic knife long after the Romans conquered Germany
- This sacred place of the Druids
- en working under the supervision of a Druid
- The hilt of a sword implanted in the ground
- [Druidic wedded bliss]
- Germanic women accompanying their husbands to war
- An essentially nocturnal religion
- One of the nation's leaders
- A woman, tall and proud, crowned with a simple oak twig
- The Rhine bars the Roman gods from Germany
- The Frivolous Roman gods
- The inhabitant of France, then and now
- The great hurricane from the North
- Ymer, the giant, is born
- After the giants came all the animals of land and sea
- A vulture perching on the sacred tree Ygdrasil
- Doré's take on the Norse (or Germanic) gods
- The Valkyries, the beautiful nymphs of carnage
- The three sacred roosters
- Tail-piece, Chapter 7
- More images of the frivolous or immoral Roman gods
- Three of the old Germanic gods
- [Christianity destroys the old Gods]
- The peasant encounters a forest-imp
- The Nixie with her harp
- Dinosaur or dragon Head-piece, Chapter 14
- Reader among the ruins — head-piece to Chapter 16
Bibliography
Santine, X. B. La Mythologie du Rhin. Paris: L. Hachette, 1862. Internet Archive version of a copy in the library of the University of Oxford. Web. 22 February 2014.
Last modified 24 February 2014