What poems describe the Lantern Festival?

Lantern Festival is one of the traditional festivals in China, usually held on the 15th day of the first lunar month. Here are some poems describing the Lantern Festival:

In late spring, Chang 'an city is full of songs and dances, and countless flowers fall. The east wind of the Cold Food Festival blows on the willow trees in the royal garden. Tonight, the banquet was at the piano table, and suddenly I saw a strange head of willow color. ("Delighting in Rain on a Spring Night" written by Du Fu in Tang Dynasty)

Spring comes at the end of the year, and Yancun flies in April. New fire tries new tea, while poetry and wine take advantage of the time. (Bai Juyi's Farewell to Ancient Grass in Tang Dynasty)

There is a lot of silk in the sky above the avenue, which is as delicate and moist as butter. The grass is vaguely connected in the distance, but it looks sparse in the near future. This is the most beautiful season of the year, far better than the late spring of the green willow. (Bai Juyi's praise of Taohua Temple in Dalin Temple in Tang Dynasty)

Bright lights greet fifteen, and groups of three and five burn 99. There are hundreds of disputes among thousands of households. (Yuan Xi by Bai Juyi in Tang Dynasty)

The golden furnace never dies every year, and the iron bridge is full of peach blossoms. No one saw the sound of Guan Qiang, and countless Liangzhou moonlit nights smelled it. (Liangzhou Ci by Wang Zhihuan in Tang Dynasty)

On the15th Lantern Festival, people get together in the shadow of lanterns. The night wind blew away the shadow of the bright moon, and every household sang and laughed. (Yuan Xi by Yang Shen in Ming Dynasty)

These poems vividly describe the lively scene of the Lantern Festival, the beauty of lanterns, the reunion of people, the breath of spring and the festive atmosphere of festivals.