The poems of Mid-Autumn Festival are written by myself.

Mid-Autumn Festival poems are as follows:

1, Mid-Autumn Festival is rainy, I want to take it for a walk. Walking in the drizzle, suddenly it was cold and wet. There is a bright moon today, and the members are a family. However, watching the continuous rain hindered the hearts of our members.

2. On the moon, the jade rabbit pounded medicine, and under the moon, the people looked at the moon. The sun, the moon and the stars are all over the sky, and they are all my relatives.

3. The sunset melts into gold, and the leaves of tung trees rustle at the beginning of the season. Gradually the ice wheel goes out to sea and cleans the ground; The birds are singing quietly. Good wind is frequent, the bell is hidden in the middle of the night, and the tiredness of summer heat disappears. Family happiness, calling friends, the banquet is high. The jade plate has reached the top of the forest, and the wine in the cup is red.

4, look at the gentleman's correction, splash ink on the wind; Exquisite and elegant, waving a brush at the landscape. At all times and in all countries, he ignored the characters and laughed at Ban Zhao. Laughing at me, lying drunk in the shade, losing this beautiful night.

5, enjoy the lonely moon in front of the window alone, the stars dim Tianhe arc. When you are in the sky, you will not be rewarded. Who will pay for the full moon?

Mid-Autumn Festival has a long history. Ancient emperors had the ritual of offering sacrifices to the sun in spring and the moon in autumn. As early as Zhou Li, there was a record of the word "Mid-Autumn Festival". Later, nobles and scholars followed suit and watched the bright and round moon in the sky on the Mid-Autumn Festival to show their respect and place their feelings. This custom spread to the people.

It became a traditional activity until the Tang Dynasty, when people paid more attention to this custom of offering sacrifices to the moon, and the Mid-Autumn Festival became a fixed festival. Emperor Taizong recorded the Mid-Autumn Festival on August 15, which was very popular in the Song Dynasty. In the Ming and Qing Dynasties, it was as famous as New Year's Day and became one of the major festivals in China.

The origin of Mid-Autumn Festival:

The Mid-Autumn Festival originated from the "Autumn Festival" and "Autumn Festival" in ancient China. As early as the Zhou Dynasty, the ancients in China had the custom of offering sacrifices to the moon in autumn. The sacrificial activities of the Autumn Society are recorded in the Book of Rites of the Week, and the Notes on Internal History records that it was a sacrifice to the Moon God at that time, praying for a bumper harvest, national prosperity and people's safety. It was not until the Tang Dynasty that the Mid-Autumn Festival was officially established and became a national statutory holiday.

The name Mid-Autumn Festival comes from the fact that it falls in the middle of the lunar year, hence the name "Mid-Autumn Festival". It is named "Mid-Autumn Festival" because it is on August 15th of the lunar calendar, in the middle of the whole month. Either way, the name "Mid-Autumn Festival" fully embodies the theme connotation of the festival "Full Moon Reunion".