Tang Meng Hao ran
Beijing is the annual Tomb-Sweeping Day, and people naturally begin to feel sad and nostalgic.
The carriage creaked on the road, and the outskirts of Liucheng were lush.
Flowers bloom, grass grows and birds fly in pairs.
Sitting in the empty lobby, reminiscing about the past, drinking tea instead of drinking.
2. Tomb-Sweeping Day?
Tang Wen Ting Yun
In Qing E Painting Fan, the trees in spring are golden and red.
If you make a mistake, you will wear a weak willow wind.
Horses are arrogant and avoid slogans, and chickens open their cages at the sight of them.
Who made this play? The oriole is separated from the Forbidden City.
3. Tomb-Sweeping Day Xiangyang Square crosses the road.
Fan Song Chengda
Sprinkle towels and rain, and wear a side hat.
Flowers bloom in the mountains and willows lie in the water.
Stone horses stand in the air and kites fly in the air.
After people dispersed, blackbirds were due west and east.
Tomb-Sweeping Day: Tomb-Sweeping Day, also known as the outing festival, is celebrated at the turn of mid-spring and late spring. The name of Tomb-Sweeping Day is named according to the solar terms, which is related to the weather characteristics at this time. As soon as the solar terms are clear, the temperature will rise and life will flourish. The earth presents the image of spring and tranquility. At this time, everything "spits out the old and absorbs the new", which is pure and clear.
"Huainanzi Astronomical Training" said: "On the fifteenth day after the vernal equinox, the bucket refers to B, then the Qingming wind will arrive"; The "Qingming wind" in the article is a refreshing and clear wind. At the age of 100, I asked, "When everything grows, it is pure and bright, so it is called Qingming." "Almanac": "On the fifteenth day after the vernal equinox, the bucket refers to Ding, which is used for Qingming. When everything is clean and bright, when it is covered, everything is clean and bright, hence the name. The weather in Tomb-Sweeping Day is usually around April 5th of the Gregorian calendar, that is, the first15th day after the vernal equinox.
Famous Tomb-Sweeping Day poems include Qingming by Du Mu and Cold Food on the Road by Song Dynasty.