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Rush Bearing,  
Ambleside 
   
On the 26th and 27th of July, the antient custom of  
Rush-bearing took place at Ambleside in Westmoreland. 
About seven o'clock on the Saturday evening, young girls, to 
the number of about forty, formed the procession to the  
Church, preceded by a band of music. Each of the girls bore  
in her hands the usual rush-bearings, the origin and  
signifacnce of which has so long puzzled the researches of  
all our Antiquaries. These elegant little trophies were  
disposed in the church round the pulpit, reading-desks,  
pews, &c. and had a really beautiful and imposing  
effect. They thus remained during the Sunday till the  
service was finished in the afternoon, when a similar  
procession was formed to convey these trophies home again.  
We understand that formerly in some parts of Lancashire a  
similar ceremony prevailed, under the same designation, in  
which the rush-bearinsg were made in the form of  
females, with a fanciful rosette for the head; and on  
looking at those at Ambleside, some faint resemblance 
to the female form may be traced in the outline. At least,  
they nearly all possessed the flowing outline of a  
petticoat. No satisfactory explanation of this ceremony has  
ever yet been given: the attempt at one is, that it is  
remnant of an antient custom, which formerly prevailed, of  
strewing the church floors with rushes to preserve the feet  
from damp; but we cannot conceive what resemblance there is  
between the practice of strewing the church with rushes, and 
the trophies which are now carried, and which have been  
carried from time immemorial. We should rather incline to  
refer its origin to the days of heathenism, as a  
representative of some offering to their gods. Whatever may  
have been its origin, we are happy to see that the darkening 
and desolating spirit of puritanism has not yet destroyed  
this little innocent festivity, along with morris dances,  
wassail bowls, and May-poles: and we trust that the  
Gentlemen of Windermere and Grasmere will long preserve this 
last relick of the days that are gone. 
  
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