Poems about missing home during the Mid-Autumn Festival

The verses about missing hometown during the Mid-Autumn Festival are as follows:

1. Look up at the bright moon and lower your head to miss your hometown. ——Li Bai's "Thoughts on a Quiet Night".

Appreciation: This poem should be recited by everyone. This poem is about the feeling of missing my hometown on a quiet moonlit night. The first two sentences of the poem describe the poet's momentary illusion in the specific environment of visiting a foreign country. For a person who lives alone in a foreign country, running around and busy during the day can dilute the sorrow of separation. However, in the dead of night, waves of longing for his hometown will inevitably arise in his heart.

When the poet stares at the moon, it is most likely to make people daydream about everything in his hometown and his relatives at home. Thinking, thinking, his head gradually lowered, completely immersed in contemplation.

2. This life and this night will not last long. Where can I see the bright moon next year? ——Su Shi's "Mid-Autumn Moon".

Appreciation: This little poem, titled "Mid-Autumn Moon", naturally writes about the joy of "people's full moon"; it is adapted from "Yangguan Song", and it also touches on farewell feelings. It describes the author and his brother Su Che's reunion after a long absence, enjoying the Mid-Autumn Moon. It also expresses the sadness and emotion of breaking up soon after they reunited.

This poem starts from the beauty of the moonlight to the happiness of "the full moon", and also speculates from this night to next year's Mid-Autumn Festival, which boils down to farewell love. The image is concentrated, the realm is lofty, the language is clear, and the meaning is profound. "Yangguan Song" was originally based on Wang Wei's poem "Send Yuan's Second Envoy to Anxi" as the lyrics. Su Shi's poem is roughly combined with Wang Wei's poem in four tones. It is the work of the lyricist who wrote the lyrics according to the score.

3. Looking at the white rabbit at this time, I want to count the hair. ——Du Fu's "The Moon on the Fifteenth Night of August".

Appreciation: This is the poet's work to avoid chaos in Shu. The main theme of this group of poems should be sad and desolate. The first two lines of the first poem are inspired by the rising moon, and use the moon on August 15th, which symbolizes reunion, to reflect my sorrow of wandering in a foreign land.

It reminds the poet of the soldiers in the "Han camp" who left their hometowns to guard the border, and also of the working people all over the world who left their hometowns during the war. Worrying about oneself more than worrying about the people, this reflects Du Fu's greatness.