This is the penultimate picture of the cycle. Around the head of Bridget lying on the bed there is a shining nymph. She is holding a simple wooden cross in her hand. A nun kneeling beside accompanies her. In open heaven we see Jesus and Mary and the half-lenght. Some words written on banderole are emergin the mouth of Christ: VENI SPONSA MEA, CORONABERIS ('Come, my bride, and you will be crowned'). The picture is signed: SANCTE MORITVR ROMAE A [NNO] D [OMINI] 1373 AETATIS SVAE 70 DIE 23 IVLII (She dies in holiness in Rome in the year 1373, July 23, aged 70).
Bridget's health deteriorated gradually, and from 17 July she felt physical torment. All the time, however, she was obtaining visions of Divine Persons' , preparing her to death and indicated her the exact date of death. On this day, in the early hours of the morning, she received the Holy Communion during Mass that was celebrated in her room. The death occurred at the residence of Piazza Farnese. At dying Saint, there was a large group of people: her daughter Catherine, Birgerus - her son and friends of Roman families of the Orsinis, the Colonns. In the picture the painter limited himself to depict only one Bridgettine.
As the sources say, the sisters of her youth, the Franciscan tertiaries, wore her in her habit, a dark brown dress, a scapular, and the rope with the knots of St. Francis. In the picture however, she is wearing a Bridgettine's habit. The author of this image did not try to reconstruct the circumstances of Bridget's death accurately: only one person is keeping her company - a nun who represents the entire Bridgettines' community. In Order of the Most Holy Saviour, consideration of the ultimate things was considered a very important mean of spiritual progress. For this reason, in the monastery there was always an open tomb, and a catafalque in the church. They were supposed to constantly remind the sisters of death. Each day they had a prayer which element was the gesture of throwing a little earth into the tomb and reciting 'De profundis' psalm by sisters and the abbess.