stalla17The last picture of the cycle shows the event that took place after the death of the Saint. The nun sitting on the clouds it is St. Bridget. The caption below says: ABNEPTEM SVAM DISPONIT AD MORTEM SANCTAM MIRACVLOSVM VICTVM SVBMINISTRAT (she is preparing her granddaughter for holy death, providing miraculous food).

The hagiography of St. Bridget exactly describes this scene. The Saint's eldest son Charles had a daughter, also named Bridget. When she was seven years old she was sent for studying to the Cistercian Vretum monastery. When deadly sick, she saw St. Bridget, her grandmother, who told her: confess  daughter. She replied that she had already confessed, then the Saint added: 'Confess I say and then you will able to wear your coat and crown and rejoicing yoy will not be able to comprehend your dream'. After this event, the dying asked to prepare her wil strawberries for eating.

When the nuns standing around her heard it, they explained her that there was a time of winter and wild strawberiies can not be found. But she insisted, and pointed to a place where they were supposed to look for: 'search near the Monastery, flick snow back and you will pick them up with overflow, because my lady told me, the Saint Bridget. Indeed, and where never the wild strawberiies were found, now, in winter, they gathered a lot of them. After this event, she died and was buried in Vadstena.

The nun sitting near a bed of the dying is probably one of the nuns of the Order. But she is wearing a bridget's habit, not a cysterian. She is holding a  tray with wild strawberries in her hand as proof of the miracle, while in the arcade clearance we see nuns, also in bridget's habits, looking for wild strawberries under the snow. The presentation directs the message to the nuns, who in Lublin church looked at this picture every day. They knew that as spiritual children of the Saint they can always count on their mother's presence. The strong link between Bridget and the nuns of her Order portrayed here, is felt even after her death.

It was one among many miracles performed by Bridget after her death: miraculous healing were recorded, and during the storm she rescued sailors  sailing to the grave of St. Saturn.