The ancients used the moon to express their homesickness.

The ancients used the moon to express their homesickness in the following poems:

1. "Thoughts on a Quiet Night" There is a bright moonlight in front of the bed, which is suspected to be frost on the ground. Raise your head to look at the bright moon, lower your head to think about your hometown.

"Thoughts on a Quiet Night" is an ancient five-character poem written by Li Bai, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. This poem describes the poet's feelings when he looked up at the moon in the house on an autumn night. The poem uses metaphors, foils and other techniques to express the homesickness of being a guest. The language is fresh and simple and the charm is implicit. It has always been widely recited.

2. People have joys and sorrows, separations and reunions, and the moon waxes and wanes. This matter is difficult to solve in ancient times. I hope people will live long and enjoy the beauty of the moon thousands of miles away.

This sentence comes from "Shui Diao Ge Tou: When will the bright moon come". It was written by Su Shi, a great writer in the Song Dynasty, during the Mid-Autumn Festival in Mizhou (now Zhucheng City, Shandong Province) in 1076 AD (the ninth year of Xining, Emperor Shenzong of the Song Dynasty). made. This poem is based on the rise of the moon and the relationship between Su Che and his brother Su Che who have not seen each other for seven years. It revolves around the Mid-Autumn Moon and unfolds imagination and thinking. It incorporates the joys and sorrows of the world into the philosophical pursuit of the universe and life, reflecting the author's The complex and contradictory thoughts and feelings also show the author's love for life and positive and optimistic spirit.

3. I don’t know how many people will return by the moon. The falling moon shakes the trees all over the river with love.

This sentence comes from "Moonlight Night on the Spring River", a work by Zhang Ruoxu, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. This poem follows the old title of Chen Sui Dynasty Yuefu, uses a clear and life-like pen, takes the moon as the main body and the river as the scene, depicts a beautiful and distant picture of a moonlit night on the spring river, and expresses the sincerity of a wanderer missing his wife. The touching emotions of farewell and the philosophical reflections on life express a unique cosmic consciousness and create a deep, broad and peaceful realm.