How Sir Percivale promised her help, and how he required her of love, and how he was saved from the fiend. [Chap. ix.]
How Sir Percivale for penance rove himself through the thigh; and how she was known for the devil. [Chap. x.]
[Here followeth the Fifteenth Book, which is of Sir Launcelot.]
How Sir Launcelot came into a chapel, where he found dead, in a white shirt, a man of religion of an hundred winter old. [Chap. i.]
Of a dead man, how men would have hewen him, and it would not be; and how Sir Launcelot took the hair of the dead man. [Chap. ii.]
Of a vision that Sir Launcelot had, and how he told it to an hermit, and desired counsel of him. [Chap. iii.]
How the hermit expounded to Sir Launcelot his vision, and told him that Sir Galahad was his son. [Chap. iv.]
How Sir Launcelot justed with many knights, and he was taken. [Chap. v.]
How Sir Launcelot told his vision unto a woman, and how she expounded it to him. [Chap. vi.]