The "Scripture of the Ten Kings" records, "Before the officials stands a great tree called the Robe-Tree. In its shadows dwell two ghosts: the first named Datsueba, the second, the Clothes-Hanging Wight. The hag ghost oversees theft and misconduct, breaking two fingers; the wight forces heads and feet together as one. At the beginning of the search, men burdened with their womenfolk, with cow-headed demons pressing iron staves upon their shoulders, rush across the treacherous rapids, all amassing beneath the tree. The hag strips off the clothes, the wight hangs them upon the branches. Sins revealed, high and low, are all sent to the hall of the final king."
Datsueba and the Clothes-Hanging Wight are two ghosts on the banks of the Three Paths River in the burial head waters.