What are Li Bai's poems about Tomb-Sweeping Day?

Li Bai's poems describing Tomb-Sweeping Day have not been handed down. Tomb-Sweeping Day's poems:

1. Without flowers and wine, it is clear and clear, and the taste is bleak like a wild monk.

Interpretation: Spending time in Tomb-Sweeping Day without flowers and wine is like a monk living in a temple in Shan Ye.

from: Qingming by Wang Yucheng in the Song Dynasty

2. In the Qingming Festival, peaches and plums laugh, and Noda's wasteland only gives birth to sorrow.

Interpretation: In the Qingming Festival, the peach is red and Li Bai is in full bloom with a smile. The graves covered with weeds in the fields are sad.

from: Qingming Festival by Huang Tingjian in Song Dynasty

3. It's a windy and hazy night, and the red porch is built with blue bricks to stab historians.

Interpretation: On a clear night, the breeze blows gently, the moonlight is hazy, the steps are bluestone, and the railings are red.

from: Qingming Night by Bai Juyi in the Tang Dynasty

4. There are many tomb fields in the north and south hills, and the Qingming Festival is different.

Interpretation: There are many cemeteries in the north and south mountains. During the Qingming period, people are busy going to the graves to offer sacrifices.

from: Gao Zhu's

On Qingming Day, 5. Emperors attach importance to Qingming, and people worry about themselves.

Interpretation: The annual Tomb-Sweeping Day in Kyoto has arrived again, and people naturally feel sad and miss.

from Meng Haoran's Qingming is the Thing in the Tang Dynasty.