The best lines of Lantern Festival poems are as follows:
1. As the lanterns turn and China passes for thousands of years, small festivals follow. Where are the fragrant cars and BMWs today? Happy Zhongyuan Yi Zhongan. "Feelings of the Lantern Festival"
2. During the Lantern Festival, people compete to see the lotus-picking boats, and the BMWs pick up gold and silver from the incense cars. "Poetry" Jiang Baishi
3. There has been no moonlight on this night for three years, but there are many bright moons in my hometown. I want to look for the moon in the sea and sky, and fly across the ocean in my dreams at the fifth watch. "Moonless Lantern Festival" (Qing Dynasty) Qiu Fengjia
4. Everywhere in urban and rural areas, people celebrate the Lantern Festival, with fireworks and lights showing joy. It's hard to lock in the new spring when the weather is cold, so it's better to cook white jade balls in a warm stove. "Partridge Sky·Celebrating the Lantern Festival" Dongfang Jun
5. The fire trees and silver flowers are together, the iron locks of the star bridge are opened, and the lights and trees are shining with thousands of lights. The bright moon chases people. The wandering prostitutes all work on plum blossoms, and all the plum blossoms fall when they sing. Jinwu can't help but stay at night, and the jade leaks don't urge each other. "The Fifteenth Night of the First Moon" (Tang Dynasty) Su Daowei
6. The city is full of lanterns and the city is filled with spring smoke, and the precious moon sinks across the sea and sky. Seeing Liu'ao Immortal in tears, the sacred mountain has been destroyed for three years! "Moonless Yuanxi" Qiu Fengjia
7. Draw the eyebrows in the mirror lightly, and worship the moon in the west deeply. People disperse and the sound of the market closes, and the sad season gradually begins. "Shengchazi·Yuanxi Opera Chen Jingsou" Liu Kezhuang
8. If there is a lamp but no moon, it will not entertain people. If there is a moon but no lamp, it is not spring. When spring arrives in the world, people are like jade, and when the lamp is burning, the moon is like silver. The streets are full of pearls and emeralds, and the village girls are dancing, and the local gods are playing and singing. If you don't show your beauty and open your mouth to smile, how can you spend this good time? "Lantern Festival" (Ming Dynasty) Tang Yin
9. When the Lantern Festival comes, the lights are lit, and the dragon and lion dance make it difficult to sleep at night. The curtain is full of flowers and the moon is shining brightly, and a bowl of glutinous rice balls is full of emotions. "Lantern Festival Night Thoughts"
10. The trees and flowers bloom together, and the iron locks of the star bridge open. The dark dust follows the horse, and the bright moon follows the person. "The Fifteenth Night of the First Month" Su Wei
Introduction to the Lantern Festival:
The Lantern Festival, also known as the Shangyuan Festival, Xiaozhengyue, Lantern Festival or Lantern Festival, takes place on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month every year.
The first month of the first lunar month is the first month of the lunar calendar. The ancients called "night" "xiao". The fifteenth day of the first lunar month is the first full-moon night of the year, so the fifteenth day of the first lunar month is called the "Lantern Festival". According to the Taoist "Three Yuan" theory, the fifteenth day of the first lunar month is also called the "Shangyuan Festival". The Lantern Festival custom has been dominated by the warm and festive lantern viewing custom since ancient times.
The formation of the Lantern Festival has a long process, which is rooted in the ancient folk custom of turning on lights to pray for blessings. According to general information and folklore, the fifteenth day of the first lunar month has been taken seriously in the Western Han Dynasty, but the Lantern Festival on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month truly became a national folk festival after the Han and Wei dynasties.
The rise of the custom of lighting lanterns on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month is also related to the spread of Buddhism to the East. Buddhism flourished in the Tang Dynasty, and officials and common people generally "lighted lanterns to worship Buddha" on the fifteenth day of the first lunar month. Buddhist lights spread among the people. Since the Tang Dynasty, lighting up lanterns during the Lantern Festival has become a legal matter.